Discovery and In Vivo Efficacy of AZ-PRMT5i-1, a Novel PRMT5 Inhibitor with High MTA Cooperativity.
James M SmithBernard BarlaamDavid BeattieLauren BradshawHo Man ChanElisabetta ChiarparinOlga CollingwoodSophie L CookeAnna CroninIain CummingEmma DeanJudit É DebreczeniIván Del Barco BarrantesCoura R DieneDavide GianniCarine GuerotXiaoxiao GuoSinem GuvenThomas G HayhowTed HongPaul D KemmittGillian M LamontScott LamontJames T LynchLisa McWilliamsShaun MoorePiotr RauboGraeme R RobbJames RobinsonJames S ScottBharath SrinivasanOliver StewardChristopher J StubbsKarl SysonLixiang TanOliver TurnerElizabeth UnderwoodJelena UrosevicMercedes Vazquez-ChantadaAmy L WhittakerDavid M WilsonJon J Winter-HoltPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2024)
PRMT5, a type 2 arginine methyltransferase, has a critical role in regulating cell growth and survival in cancer. With the aim of developing MTA-cooperative PRMT5 inhibitors suitable for MTAP-deficient cancers, herein we report our efforts to develop novel "MTA-cooperative" compounds identified through a high-throughput biochemical screening approach. Optimization of hits was achieved through structure-based design with a focus on improvement of oral drug-like properties. Bioisosteric replacement of the original thiazole guanidine headgroup, spirocyclization of the isoindolinone amide scaffold to both configurationally and conformationally lock the bioactive form, and fine-tuning of the potency, MTA cooperativity, and DMPK properties through specific substitutions of the azaindole headgroup were conducted. We have identified an orally available in vivo lead compound, 28 ("AZ-PRMT5i-1"), which shows sub-10 nM PRMT5 cell potency, >50-fold MTA cooperativity, suitable DMPK properties for oral dosing, and significant PRMT5-driven in vivo efficacy in several MTAP-deficient preclinical cancer models.