Discovery of Non-Nucleotide Small-Molecule STING Agonists via Chemotype Hybridization.

Journal: Journal Of Medicinal Chemistry
Published:
Abstract

The identification of agonists of the stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway has been an area of intense research due to their potential to enhance innate immune response and tumor immunogenicity in the context of immuno-oncology therapy. Initial efforts to identify STING agonists focused on the modification of 2',3'-cGAMP (1) (an endogenous STING activator ligand) and other closely related cyclic dinucleotides (CDNs). While these efforts have successfully identified novel CDNs that have progressed into the clinic, their utility is currently limited to patients with solid tumors that STING agonists can be delivered to intratumorally. Herein, we report the discovery of a unique class of non-nucleotide small-molecule STING agonists that demonstrate antitumor activity when dosed intratumorally in a syngeneic mouse model.

Authors
Emily Cherney, Liping Zhang, Julian Lo, Tram Huynh, Donna Wei, Vijay Ahuja, Claude Quesnelle, Gary Schieven, Alan Futran, Gregory Locke, Zeyu Lin, Laura Monereau, Charu Chaudhry, Jordan Blum, Sha Li, Mark Fereshteh, Bifang Li Wang, Sanjeev Gangwar, Chin Pan, Colin Chong, Xiao Zhu, Shana Posy, John Sack, Ping Zhang, Max Ruzanov, Mary Harner, Fahad Akhtar, Gretchen Schroeder, Gregory Vite, Brian Fink