Abstract

The aberrant c-Met activation has been implicated in a variety of human cancers for its critical role in tumor growth, metastasis and tumor angiogenesis. Thus, c-Met axis presents as an attractive therapeutic target. Notably, most of these c-Met inhibitors currently being evaluated in clinical trials lack selectivity and target multiple kinases, often accounting for the undesirable toxicities. Here we described Simm530 as a potent and selective c-Met inhibitor. Simm530 demonstrated >2,000 fold selectivity for c-Met compared with other 282 kinases, making it one of the most selective c-Met inhibitors described to date. This inhibitor significantly blocked c-Met signaling pathways regardless of mechanistic complexity implicated in c-Met activation. As a result, Simm530 led to substantial inhibition of c-Met-promoted cell proliferation, migration, invasion, ECM degradation, cell scattering and invasive growth. In addition, Simm530 inhibited primary human umbilical vascular endothelial cell (HUVEC) proliferation, decreased intratumoral CD31 expression and plasma pro-angiogenic factor interleukin-8 secretion, suggesting its significant anti-angiogenic properties. Simm530 resulted in dose-dependent inhibition of c-Met phosphorylation and tumor growth in c-Met-driven lung and gastric cancer xenografts. And, the inhibitor is well tolerated even at doses that achieve complete tumor regression. Together, Simm530 is a potent and highly selective c-Met kinase inhibitor that may have promising therapeutic potential in c-Met-driven cancer treatment.

Highlights

  • The oncogene MET encodes the receptor tyrosine kinase for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) [1,2,3,4]

  • Simm530 demonstrated >2,000 fold selectivity for c-Met compared with other 282 kinases, making it one of the most selective c-Met inhibitors described to date

  • Simm530 was initially identified as a potent c-Met kinase inhibitor with an IC50 value of 0.50 ± 0.16 nM using an ELISA assay with recombinant c-Met kinase protein (Figure 1A, 1B)

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Summary

Introduction

The oncogene MET encodes the receptor tyrosine kinase for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) [1,2,3,4]. Activation of the c-Met pathway triggers a unique genetic program, known as the “invasive growth”, which physiologically underlies tissue morphogenesis. Aberrant execution of this program has been associated with neoplastic transformation, invasion and metastasis [5,6,7,8]. Over-activation of HGF/c-Met axis has been linked to acquired or de novo resistance to targeted therapies, such as EGFR, B-Raf and HER-2 inhibitors [12,13,14,15]. C-Met axis has emerged as an attractive target for therapeutic medication of cancer

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