Abstract
RET (REarranged during Transfection) is a receptor tyrosine kinase, which plays pivotal roles in regulating cell survival, differentiation, proliferation, migration and chemotaxis. Activation of RET is a mechanism of oncogenesis in medullary thyroid carcinomas where both germline and sporadic activating somatic mutations are prevalent. At present, there are no known specific RET inhibitors in clinical development, although many potent inhibitors of RET have been opportunistically identified through selectivity profiling of compounds initially designed to target other tyrosine kinases. Vandetanib and cabozantinib, both multi-kinase inhibitors with RET activity, are approved for use in medullary thyroid carcinoma, but additional pharmacological activities, most notably inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor - VEGFR2 (KDR), lead to dose-limiting toxicity. The recent identification of RET fusions present in ~1% of lung adenocarcinoma patients has renewed interest in the identification and development of more selective RET inhibitors lacking the toxicities associated with the current treatments. In an earlier publication [Newton et al, 2016; 1] we reported the discovery of a series of 2-substituted phenol quinazolines as potent and selective RET kinase inhibitors. Here we describe the development of the robust screening cascade which allowed the identification and advancement of this chemical series. Furthermore we have profiled a panel of RET-active clinical compounds both to validate the cascade and to confirm that none display a RET-selective target profile.
Highlights
RET is a receptor tyrosine kinase (TK) expressed primarily on derived neural crest and urogenital cells during embryonic development
In an earlier publication1 we reported the discovery of 2-substituted phenol quinazolines as potent RET kinase inhibitors with improved KDR selectivity; here we describe development of the robust screening cascade which allowed us to achieve that goal and profile existing clinical compounds with RET activity in order to assess them against our compound target profile
Paterson Drug Discovery (PDD) compounds were synthesised in-house by methods described in an earlier publication1
Summary
RET is a receptor tyrosine kinase (TK) expressed primarily on derived neural crest and urogenital cells during embryonic development. It is required for maturation of several cell lineages of the peripheral nervous system, kidney morphogenesis and spermatogenesis. The coiled-coil domains present in the fusion partner promote overexpression and ligandindependent dimerization leading to constitutive activation of RET. These studies demonstrated that the resulting fusion proteins are oncogenic, and that their inhibition has therapeutic potential. RET-positive patients represent a well-defined population with specific features: all are adenocarcinomas, and patients tend to be non-smokers and to be younger than the median age for lung cancer patients
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