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A Probe-Free Occupancy Assay to Assess a Targeted Covalent Inhibitor of Receptor Tyrosine-Protein Kinase erbB-2.

Liang XueDaniel van KalkenErika M JamesGiulia GiammoMatthew T LabenskiSusan CantinKelly FahnoeKarin WormZhigang WangAlan F Corin
Published in: ACS pharmacology & translational science (2024)
Establishing target engagement is fundamental to effective target-based drug development. It paves the way for efficient medicinal chemistry design and definitive answers about target validation in the clinic. For irreversible targeted covalent inhibitor (TCI) drugs, there is a unique opportunity to establish and quantify the target engagement or occupancy. This is typically accomplished by using a covalent molecular probe, often a TCI analogue, derivatized to allow unoccupied target sites to be tracked; the difference of total sites minus unoccupied sites yields the occupied sites. When such probes are not available or the target is not readily accessible to covalent probes, another approach is needed. Receptor tyrosine-protein kinase erbB-2 (HER2) occupancy by afatinib presents such a case. Available HER2 covalent probes were unable to consistently modify HER2 after sample preparation, resulting in inadequate data. We demonstrate an alternative quantitative probe-free occupancy (PFO) method. It employs the immunoprecipitation of HER2 and direct mass spectrometer analysis of the cysteine-containing peptide that is targeted and covalently occupied by afatinib. Nontarget HER2 peptides provide normalization to the total protein. We show that HER2 occupancy by afatinib correlates directly to the inhibition of the receptor tyrosine kinase activity in NCI-N87 cells in culture and in vivo using those cells in a mouse tumor xenograft mode.
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