1. Academic Validation
  2. Identification of 2-Sulfonyl/Sulfonamide Pyrimidines as Covalent Inhibitors of WRN Using a Multiplexed High-Throughput Screening Assay

Identification of 2-Sulfonyl/Sulfonamide Pyrimidines as Covalent Inhibitors of WRN Using a Multiplexed High-Throughput Screening Assay

  • Biochemistry. 2023 Jul 18;62(14):2147-2160. doi: 10.1021/acs.biochem.2c00599.
Mackenzie J Parker 1 Hyelee Lee 1 Shihua Yao 1 Sean Irwin 1 Sunil Hwang 1 Kylie Belanger 1 Sofia Woo de Mare 1 Richard Surgenor 1 Lu Yan 1 Patricia Gee 1 Shravan Morla 1 Xiaoling Puyang 1 Peng Hsiao 1 Hao Zeng 1 Ping Zhu 1 Manav Korpal 1 Paul Dransfield 1 David M Bolduc 1 Nicholas A Larsen 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 H3 Biomedicine, Inc., 300 Technology Square, Suite 5, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, United States.
Abstract

Werner syndrome protein (WRN) is a multifunctional Enzyme with helicase, ATPase, and exonuclease activities that are necessary for numerous DNA-related transactions in the human cell. Recent studies identified WRN as a synthetic lethal target in cancers characterized by genomic microsatellite instability resulting from defects in DNA mismatch repair pathways. WRN's helicase activity is essential for the viability of these high microsatellite instability (MSI-H) cancers and thus presents a therapeutic opportunity. To this end, we developed a multiplexed high-throughput screening assay that monitors exonuclease, ATPase, and helicase activities of full-length WRN. This screening campaign led to the discovery of 2-sulfonyl/sulfonamide pyrimidine derivatives as novel covalent inhibitors of WRN helicase activity. The compounds are specific for WRN versus other human RecQ family members and show competitive behavior with ATP. Examination of these novel chemical probes established the sulfonamide NH group as a key driver of compound potency. One of the leading compounds, H3B-960, showed consistent activities in a range of assays (IC50 = 22 nM, KD = 40 nM, KI = 32 nM), and the most potent compound identified, H3B-968, has inhibitory activity IC50 ∼ 10 nM. These kinetic properties trend toward other known covalent druglike molecules. Our work provides a new avenue for screening WRN for inhibitors that may be adaptable to different therapeutic modalities such as targeted protein degradation, as well as a proof of concept for the inhibition of WRN helicase activity by covalent molecules.

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