Deregulation of the
transcriptional repressor BCL6 enables tumorigenesis
of germinal center B-cells, and hence BCL6 has been proposed as a
therapeutic target for the treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
(DLBCL). Herein we report the discovery of a series of benzimidazolone
inhibitors of the protein–protein interaction between BCL6
and its co-repressors. A subset of these inhibitors were found to
cause rapid degradation of BCL6, and optimization of pharmacokinetic
properties led to the discovery of 5-((5-chloro-2-((3R,5S)-4,4-difluoro-3,5-dimethylpiperidin-1-yl)pyrimidin-4-yl)amino)-3-(3-hydroxy-3-methylbutyl)-1-methyl-1,3-dihydro-2H-benzo[d]imidazol-2-one (CCT369260),
which reduces BCL6 levels in a lymphoma xenograft mouse model following
oral dosing.
Substrate channeling has emerged as a common mechanism for enzymatic intermediate transfer. A conspicuous gap in knowledge concerns the use of covalent lysine imines in the transfer of carbonyl-group-containing intermediates, despite their wide use in enzymatic catalysis. Here we show how imine chemistry operates in the transfer of covalent intermediates in pyridoxal 5΄-phosphate biosynthesis by the Arabidopsis thaliana enzyme Pdxl. An initial ribose 5-phosphate lysine imine is converted to the chromophoric l320 intermediate, simultaneously bound to two lysine residues and partially vacating the active site, which creates space for glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate to bind. Crystal structures show how substrate binding, catalysis and shuttling are coupled to conformational changes around strand β6 of the Pdxl (βα)8-barrel. The dual-specificity active site and imine relay mechanism for migration of carbonyl intermediates provide elegant solutions to the challenge of coordinating a complex sequence of reactions that follow a path of over 20 Å between substrate-and product-binding sites.
We describe the optimization
of modestly active starting points
to potent inhibitors of BCL6 by growing into a subpocket, which was
occupied by a network of five stably bound water molecules. Identifying
potent inhibitors required not only forming new interactions in the
subpocket but also perturbing the water network in a productive, potency-increasing
fashion while controlling the physicochemical properties. We achieved
this goal in a sequential manner by systematically probing the pocket
and the water network, ultimately achieving a 100-fold improvement
of activity. The most potent compounds displaced three of the five
initial water molecules and formed hydrogen bonds with the remaining
two. Compound
25
showed a promising profile for a lead
compound with submicromolar inhibition of BCL6 in cells and satisfactory
pharmacokinetic (PK) properties. Our work highlights the importance
of finding productive ways to perturb existing water networks when
growing into solvent-filled protein pockets.
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