AI Article Synopsis

  • - T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is a severe blood cancer that lacks effective targeted treatments for patients whose disease has come back after initial therapy, prompting research into new methods of treatment.
  • - Researchers have discovered that inhibiting a protein called LCK can be a critical strategy for targeting T-ALL; they developed a new compound, SJ11646, which is more effective than the existing drug dasatinib by significantly degrading LCK proteins and exhibiting stronger cytotoxicity against leukemia cells.
  • - In tests, SJ11646 demonstrated a much longer duration of LCK suppression in models of T-ALL compared to dasatinib, leading to increased survival rates, and may also have potential applications for targeting

Article Abstract

T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive hematological malignancy, and there is an unmet need for targeted therapies, especially for patients with relapsed disease. We have recently identified pre-T cell receptor and lymphocyte-specific protein tyrosine kinase (LCK) signaling as a common therapeutic vulnerability in T-ALL. LCK inhibitor dasatinib showed efficacy against T-ALL in preclinical studies and in patients with T-ALL; however, this is transient in most cases. Leveraging the proteolysis targeting chimera (PROTAC) approach, we developed a series of LCK degraders using dasatinib as an LCK ligand and phenyl-glutarimide as a cereblon-directing moiety. Our lead compound SJ11646 exhibited marked efficiency in cereblon-mediated LCK degradation in T-ALL cells. Relative to dasatinib, SJ11646 showed up to three orders of magnitude higher cytotoxicity in LCK-activated T-ALL cell lines and primary leukemia samples in vitro, with drastically prolonged suppression of LCK signaling. In vivo pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profiling indicated a 630% increase in the duration of LCK suppression by SJ11646 over dasatinib in patient-derived xenograft models of T-ALL, which translated into its extended leukemia-free survival over dasatinib in vivo. Last, SJ11646 retained a high binding affinity to 51 human kinases, particularly ABL1, KIT, and DDR1, all of which are known drug targets in other cancers. Together, our dasatinib-based phenyl-glutarimide PROTACs are promising therapeutic agents in T-ALL and valuable tools for developing degradation-based therapeutics for other cancers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9730446PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.abo5228DOI Listing

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