Abstract The macrodomain protein poly(ADP ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG) has been shown to be a critical component in the repair of single stand DNA breaks and counteracts the function of the ARTD family of poly(ADP ribose) polymerases, commonly known as the PARPs. As PARG exists as a single protein, it presents an attractive target for therapeutic intervention in cancer cells with enhanced dependence upon DNA repair. Inhibitors of this enzyme have proved difficult to discover and develop. Moreover, intact cell-active tool compounds which have the propensity to be used as robust chemical probes to understand PARG pharmacology, are absent from the literature. This poster will describe our work in this emerging area, optimising a series of drug-like quinazolinedione derivatives to deliver molecules with the correct physicochemical and biochemical properties to function as in vitro cell probe compounds. These unprecedented agents display potent on-target biochemical (5 nM) and cell (10 nM) activity with a significant window to acute 3-day cytotoxicity. Moreover, these agents are selective against PARP family members and the close glycohydrolase homologue ARH3. The medicinal chemistry optimisation of the scaffold will be described, alongside the outline pharmacology demonstrating on-target, selective inhibition of PARG in cells. Such tool compounds will be of value in revealing the detailed mechanisms of action of PARG in DNA repair and other PAR chain-mediated cellular processes, with the ultimate goal of delivering novel and clinically relevant therapeutic agents. Citation Format: Kate Smith, Ben Acton, Dominic James, Cliff Jones, Stuart Jones, Allan Jordan, Nicola Hamilton, Alison McGonagle, Daniel Mould, Helen Small, Alex Stowell, Julie Tucker, Ian Waddell, Bohdan Waszkowycz, Donald Ogilvie. Optimisation of quinazolinedione sulphonamides as novel inhibitors of poly(ADP Ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG). [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2016 Apr 16-20; New Orleans, LA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(14 Suppl):Abstract nr 3714.