Long-Acting Tumor-Activated Prodrug of a TGFβR Inhibitor.

Journal: Journal Of Medicinal Chemistry
Published:
Abstract

Inhibition of TGFβ signaling in concert with a checkpoint blockade has been shown to provide improved and durable antitumor immune response in mouse models. However, on-target adverse cardiovascular effects have limited the clinical use of TGFβ receptor (TGFβR) inhibitors in cancer therapy. To restrict the activity of TGFβR inhibitors to tumor tissues and thereby widen the therapeutic index, a series of tumor-activated prodrugs of a selective small molecule TGFβR1 inhibitor 1 were prepared by appending 1 to a serine protease substrate and a half-life extension fatty acid carbon chain. The prodrugs were shown to be selectively metabolized in tumor tissues relative to the heart and blood and demonstrated a prolonged favorable increase in the tumor-to-heart ratio of the active drug in tissue distribution studies. Once-weekly administration of the most tissue-selective compound 10 provided anti-tumor efficacy comparable to the parent compound and reduced systemic exposure of the active drug.

Authors
Yong Zhang, Karen Parrish, David Tortolani, Michael Poss, Audris Huang, Honghe Wan, Ashok Purandare, Andrew Donnell, James Kempson, Xiaoping Hou, Joseph Pawluczyk, Shiuhang Yip, Emily Luk, Nimmi Raghavan, Jesse Swanson, James Smalley, Anwar Murtaza, Zheng Yang, Karen Augustine Rauch, Louis Lombardo, Robert Borzilleri