Q3 · MEDICINE
Article
Author: Seward, Eileen ; Madin, Andrew ; Sneeringer, Christopher J. ; Wei, Binqing ; Chan, Grace Ka Yan ; Jones, Graham E. ; Heffron, Timothy P. ; Luo, Xifeng ; Malhotra, Sushant ; Lainchbury, Michael ; Hu, Baihua ; Pang, Jodie ; Chan, Bryan K. ; Choo, Edna F. ; Elliott, Richard L. ; Stivala, Craig E. ; Blench, Toby ; Brewer, Thomas F. ; Wang, Weiru ; Cartwright, Matthew W. ; Salphati, Laurent ; Gazzard, Lewis ; Moffat, John G. ; Gancia, Emanuela ; Drummond, Jason ; An, Le ; Wu, Ping
Hematopoietic progenitor kinase 1 (HPK1) is implicated as a negative regulator of T-cell receptor-induced T-cell activation. Studies using HPK1 kinase-dead knock-in animals have demonstrated the loss of HPK1 kinase activity resulted in an increase in T-cell function and tumor growth inhibition in glioma models. Herein, we describe the discovery of a series of small molecule inhibitors of HPK1. Using a structure-based drug design approach, the kinase selectivity of the molecules was significantly improved by inducing and stabilizing an unusual P-loop folded binding mode. The metabolic liabilities of the initial 7-azaindole high-throughput screening hit were mitigated by addressing a key metabolic soft spot along with physicochemical property-based optimization. The resulting spiro-azaindoline HPK1 inhibitors demonstrated improved in vitro ADME properties and the ability to induce cytokine production in primary human T-cells.