Abstract

Abstract WEE1 and PKMYT1 kinases play essential roles in cell cycle checkpoints and DNA damage response. Genetic interaction has been documented between WEE1 and PKMYT1, and clinical trials have reported clinical activity with inhibitors of WEE1 (adavosertib, azenosertib) and PKMYT1 (lunresertib). Here, we report the discovery and characterization of ACR-2316, a dual inhibitor of WEE1 and PKMYT1 specifically designed for optimal selectivity through co-crystallography and superior single agent activity uniquely enabled by Acrivon Predictive Precision Proteomics (AP3). Mass spectrometry-based AP3 profiling was conducted across several novel WEE1 and PKMYT1 inhibitor leads generated through co-crystallography-based rational drug design. Selective leads originating from one series were further optimized using AP3 for biological structure-activity relationship analysis. AP3 profiling revealed WEE1 inhibitor-upregulated phosphorylation sites across a subset of phosphoproteins that were oppositely regulated (quenched) by PKMYT1 inhibitors. Consensus sites for these included CDK1 T14, a direct PKMYT1 phosphorylation site, as well as CHK1 S296. A particular lead compound, ACR-2316, demonstrated a desirable potent, balanced ratio of cellular WEE1 (IC50 = 2 nM, IC90 = 10 nM) and PKMYT1 (IC20 = 44 nM) inhibition resulting in superior activation of the mitotic kinases CDK1, CDK2, and PLK1 compared to adavosertib and lunresertib, based on annotated kinase substrate relationships. ACR-2316 is more selective than adavosertib, azenosertib, and lunresertib based on >200 kinases profiled by AP3 and 468 kinases assessed by KINOMEscan. Cell cycle analyses demonstrated a drastic ACR-2316-induced S-G2/M accumulation qualitatively distinct from adavosertib or lunresertib. In a 19-cancer cell line proliferation assay (CellTiter-Glo), ACR-2316 demonstrated greater potency in all cell lines tested compared to adavosertib and lunresertib (mean IC50 = 70, 252 and 364 nM, respectively). Superior anti-cancer activity of ACR-2316 was observed in 12 ovarian cancer patient-derived xenograft models tested ex vivo (CellTiter-Glo 3D) compared to azenosertib and lunresertib (mean IC50 = 9, 248 and 1620 nM, respectively). Across human tumor xenograft mouse models, oral administration of ACR-2316 demonstrated superior, durable, dose-dependent efficacy compared to azenosertib and lunresertib and was well tolerated at all doses. Complete responses observed with ACR-2316 were associated with strong WEE1 and intermediate PKMYT1 inhibition in tumors. In conclusion, ACR-2316 is a potent, selective dual WEE1/PKMYT1 inhibitor with superior single-agent activity compared to clinical WEE1 or PKMYT1 inhibitors. ACR-2316 is progressing through IND-enabling studies in preparation for clinical monotherapy development. Citation Format: Caroline Wigerup, Helén Nilsson, Lei Shi, Joon Jung, Joelle Baddour-Sousounis, Ruban Cornelius, Nina Lipjankic, Uthira Muralitharan, Valentina Siino, Ignacio Arribas Diez, Zachary Best, Martina Pasetto, William Dahlberg, Shahrzad Rafiei, Portia Lombardo, Magnus E. Jakobsson, Reina Improgo, Christina Scherer, John van Duzer, David A. Proia, Kristina Masson, Peter Blume-Jensen. ACR-2316: A potentially first-in-class, potent, selective WEE1/PKMYT1 inhibitor rationally designed for superior single agent activity through synergistic disruption of cell cycle checkpoints [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 1977.

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