1. Academic Validation
  2. Novel mutant-selective EGFR kinase inhibitors against EGFR T790M

Novel mutant-selective EGFR kinase inhibitors against EGFR T790M

  • Nature. 2009 Dec 24;462(7276):1070-4. doi: 10.1038/nature08622.
Wenjun Zhou 1 Dalia Ercan Liang Chen Cai-Hong Yun Danan Li Marzia Capelletti Alexis B Cortot Lucian Chirieac Roxana E Iacob Robert Padera John R Engen Kwok-Kin Wong Michael J Eck Nathanael S Gray Pasi A Jänne
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Cancer Biology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, 44 Binney Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Abstract

The clinical efficacy of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) kinase inhibitors in EGFR-mutant non-small-cell lung Cancer (NSCLC) is limited by the development of drug-resistance mutations, including the gatekeeper T790M mutation. Strategies targeting EGFR T790M with irreversible inhibitors have had limited success and are associated with toxicity due to concurrent inhibition of wild-type EGFR. All current EGFR inhibitors possess a structurally related quinazoline-based core scaffold and were identified as ATP-competitive inhibitors of wild-type EGFR. Here we identify a covalent pyrimidine EGFR inhibitor by screening an irreversible kinase inhibitor library specifically against EGFR T790M. These agents are 30- to 100-fold more potent against EGFR T790M, and up to 100-fold less potent against wild-type EGFR, than quinazoline-based EGFR inhibitors in vitro. They are also effective in murine models of lung Cancer driven by EGFR T790M. Co-crystallization studies reveal a structural basis for the increased potency and mutant selectivity of these agents. These mutant-selective irreversible EGFR kinase inhibitors may be clinically more effective and better tolerated than quinazoline-based inhibitors. Our findings demonstrate that functional pharmacological screens against clinically important mutant kinases represent a powerful strategy to identify new classes of mutant-selective kinase inhibitors.

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