作者
Thomas H. Pillow,Pragya Adhikari,Robert A. Blake,Jinhua Chen,Geoffrey Del Rosario,Gauri Deshmukh,Isabel Figueroa,Karen E. Gascoigne,Amrita V. Kamath,Susan Kaufman,Tracy Kleinheinz,Katherine R. Kozak,Brandon Latifi,Douglas D. Leipold,Chun Sing Li,Ruina Li,Melinda M. Mulvihill,Aimee O’Donohue,Rebecca K. Rowntree,Jack Sadowsky,John Wai,Xinxin Wang,Cong Wu,Zijin Xu,Hui Yao,Shang‐Fan Yu,Donglu Zhang,Richard Zang,Hongyan Zhang,Hao Zhou,Xiaoyu Zhu,Peter S. Dragovich
摘要
Abstract 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.