Novel WRN Helicase Inhibitors Selectively Target Microsatellite Unstable Cancer Cells.
Gabriele PiccoYanhua RaoAngham Al SaediYang LeeSara F VieiraShriram BhosleKieron MayCarmen HerranzSamantha J WalkerRaynold ShenjeCansu DincerFreddy GibsonRuby BanerjeeZoe HewitsonThilo WernerJoshua E CottomYang PengNanhua DengPhilip LandisDaniela ConticelliKatrina McCartenJacob T BushMamta SharmaHoward LightfootDavid HouseEmma MilfordEmma K GrantMichal P GlogowskiCraig D WagnerMarcus BantscheffAnna Rutkowska-KluteCell Model Network Uk GroupFrancesca ZappacostaJonathan PettingerSyd BarthorpeH Christian EberlBrian T JonesJessica L SchneckDennis J MurphyEmile E VoestJoshua P TaygerlyMichael P DeMartinoMatthew A CoelhoJonathan HouseleyGeeta SharmaBenjamin J SchwartzMathew J GarnettPublished in: Cancer discovery (2024)
Microsatellite-unstable (MSI) cancers require WRN helicase to resolve replication stress due to expanded DNA (TA)n-dinucleotide repeats. WRN is a promising synthetic lethal target for MSI tumours, and WRN inhibitors are in development. Here, we used CRISPR-Cas9 base editing to map WRN residues critical for MSI cells, validating the helicase domain as the primary drug target. Fragment-based screening led to the development of potent and highly selective WRN helicase covalent inhibitors. These compounds selectively suppressed MSI model growth In vitro and In vivo by mimicking WRN loss, inducing DNA double-strand breaks at expanded TA-repeats and DNA damage. Assessment of biomarkers in preclinical models linked TA-repeat expansions and mismatch repair (MMR) alterations to compound activity. Efficacy was confirmed in immunotherapy-resistant organoids and patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models. The discovery of potent, selective covalent WRN inhibitors provides proof of concept for synthetic-lethal targeting of WRN in MSI cancer and tools to dissect WRN biology.