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Antibody Conjugation of a Chimeric BET Degrader Enables in vivo Activity.

Thomas H PillowPragya AdhikariRobert A BlakeJinhua ChenGeoffrey Del RosarioGauri DeshmukhIsabel FigueroaKaren E GascoigneAmrita V KamathSusan KaufmanTracy KleinheinzKatherine R KozakBrandon LatifiDouglas D LeipoldChun Sing LiRuina LiMelinda M MulvihillAimee O'DonohueRebecca K RowntreeJack D SadowskyJohn WaiXinxin WangCong WuZijin XuHui YaoShang-Fan YuDonglu ZhangRichard ZangHongyan ZhangHao ZhouXiaoyu ZhuPeter S Dragovich
Published in: ChemMedChem (2019)
The ability to selectively degrade proteins with bifunctional small molecules has the potential to fundamentally alter therapy in a variety of diseases. However, the relatively large size of these chimeric molecules often results in challenging physico-chemical properties (e. g., low aqueous solubility) and poor pharmacokinetics which may complicate their in vivo applications. We recently discovered an exquisitely potent chimeric BET degrader (GNE-987) which exhibited picomolar cell potencies but also demonstrated low in vivo exposures. In an effort to improve the pharmacokinetic properties of this molecule, we discovered the first degrader-antibody conjugate by attaching GNE-987 to an anti-CLL1 antibody via a novel linker. A single IV dose of the conjugate afforded sustained in vivo exposures that resulted in antigen-specific tumor regressions. Enhancement of a chimeric protein degrader with poor in vivo properties through antibody conjugation thereby expands the utility of directed protein degradation as both a biological tool and a therapeutic possibility.
Keyphrases
  • cell therapy
  • stem cells
  • air pollution
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • cancer therapy
  • single cell
  • climate change
  • drug delivery
  • metal organic framework