作者
Bryan Chan,Eileen M. Seward,Michael Lainchbury,Thomas F. Brewer,Le An,Toby Blench,Matthew W. Cartwright,Grace Ka Yan Chan,Edna F. Choo,Jason Drummond,Richard L. Elliott,Emanuela Gancia,Lewis Gazzard,Baihua Hu,Graham Jones,Xifeng Luo,Andrew Madin,Sushant Malhotra,John G. Moffat,Jodie Pang,Laurent Salphati,Christopher J. Sneeringer,Craig E. Stivala,BinQing Wei,Weiru Wang,Ping Wu,Timothy P. Heffron
摘要
Hematopoietic progenitor kinase 1 (HPK1) is implicated as a negative regulator of T-cell receptor-induced T-cell activation. Studies using HPK1 kinase-dead knock-in animals have demonstrated the loss of HPK1 kinase activity resulted in an increase in T-cell function and tumor growth inhibition in glioma models. Herein, we describe the discovery of a series of small molecule inhibitors of HPK1. Using a structure-based drug design approach, the kinase selectivity of the molecules was significantly improved by inducing and stabilizing an unusual P-loop folded binding mode. The metabolic liabilities of the initial 7-azaindole high-throughput screening hit were mitigated by addressing a key metabolic soft spot along with physicochemical property-based optimization. The resulting spiro-azaindoline HPK1 inhibitors demonstrated improved in vitro ADME properties and the ability to induce cytokine production in primary human T-cells.