Q2 · BIOLOGY
Article
Author: Burger, Dominique ; Bonfil, R. Daniel ; Uhles, Sabine ; Stihle, Martine ; Bedoucha, Marc ; Kim, Jin-Ju ; Fornoni, Alessia ; Georges, Guy J. ; Prunotto, Marco ; Satz, Alexander L. ; Molina-David, Judith ; Kocer, Buelent ; Richter, Hans ; Faul, Christian ; Moll, Solange ; Fridman, Rafael ; Hochstrasser, Remo ; Santos, Javier Varona ; Kuhn, Bernd ; Hug, Melanie N. ; Harmeier, Anja ; Petersen, Ann C. ; Weibel, Franziska ; Hermosilla, Ricardo ; Huber, Sylwia ; Gasser, Rodolfo ; Gsell, Bernard ; Rudolph, Markus G. ; Buettelmann, Bernd ; Ritter, Martin
The importance of Discoidin Domain Receptor 1 (DDR1) in renal fibrosis has been shown via gene knockout and use of antisense oligonucleotides; however, these techniques act via a reduction of DDR1 protein, while we prove the therapeutic potential of inhibiting DDR1 phosphorylation with a small molecule. To date, efforts to generate a selective small-molecule to specifically modulate the activity of DDR1 in an in vivo model have been unsuccessful. We performed parallel DNA encoded library screens against DDR1 and DDR2, and discovered a chemical series that is highly selective for DDR1 over DDR2. Structure-guided optimization efforts yielded the potent DDR1 inhibitor 2.45, which possesses excellent kinome selectivity (including 64-fold selectivity over DDR2 in a biochemical assay), a clean in vitro safety profile, and favorable pharmacokinetic and physicochemical properties. As desired, compound 2.45 modulates DDR1 phosphorylation in vitro as well as prevents collagen-induced activation of renal epithelial cells expressing DDR1. Compound 2.45 preserves renal function and reduces tissue damage in Col4a3-/- mice (the preclinical mouse model of Alport syndrome) when employing a therapeutic dosing regime, indicating the real therapeutic value of selectively inhibiting DDR1 phosphorylation in vivo. Our results may have wider significance as Col4a3-/- mice also represent a model for chronic kidney disease, a disease which affects 10% of the global population.