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Discovery and characterization of small molecule inhibitors of CBL-B that act as intramolecular glue to enhance T-cell anti-tumor activity

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Abstract CBL-B is a RING-type E3 ubiquitin ligase that acts as a critical negative regulator of T-cell activation. It promotes T-cell anergy and suppresses immune responses through ubiquitin-mediated control of signaling proteins at the immunological synapse. T cells deficient in CBL-B activity lose their dependence on CD28 co-stimulation, exhibit heightened activation and increased cytokine production, and fail to re-establish anergy. In addition, mice deficient in CBL-B activity reject tumors. Together, this cellular mechanism and in vivo phenotype suggest inhibition of CBL-B may be a viable immuno-oncology therapeutic strategy. Here, we report the rational design and execution of a high-throughput screen (HTS) to identify small molecule inhibitors of CBL-B. This campaign led to the discovery of a scaffold that inhibits CBL-B E3 ligase activity with micromolar potency. Structural characterization revealed an intramolecular glue mechanism, in which the compound stabilizes the closed state of CBL-B, preventing phosphorylation of a tyrosine residue that is critical for activation and E2 binding. Iterative structure–activity optimization yielded compounds with nanomolar activity that enhanced T-cell activation and cytokine secretion in primary human T cells and suppressed tumor growth in a syngeneic colorectal mouse model. Together, these studies validate the biological rationale for pharmacological CBL-B inhibition and enabled the de novo discovery of intramolecular CBL-B glue inhibitors. This work culminated in the identification of NX-1607, a first-in-class oral CBL-B inhibitor now in clinical development for cancer immunotherapy.
Title: Discovery and characterization of small molecule inhibitors of CBL-B that act as intramolecular glue to enhance T-cell anti-tumor activity
Description:
Abstract CBL-B is a RING-type E3 ubiquitin ligase that acts as a critical negative regulator of T-cell activation.
It promotes T-cell anergy and suppresses immune responses through ubiquitin-mediated control of signaling proteins at the immunological synapse.
T cells deficient in CBL-B activity lose their dependence on CD28 co-stimulation, exhibit heightened activation and increased cytokine production, and fail to re-establish anergy.
In addition, mice deficient in CBL-B activity reject tumors.
Together, this cellular mechanism and in vivo phenotype suggest inhibition of CBL-B may be a viable immuno-oncology therapeutic strategy.
Here, we report the rational design and execution of a high-throughput screen (HTS) to identify small molecule inhibitors of CBL-B.
This campaign led to the discovery of a scaffold that inhibits CBL-B E3 ligase activity with micromolar potency.
Structural characterization revealed an intramolecular glue mechanism, in which the compound stabilizes the closed state of CBL-B, preventing phosphorylation of a tyrosine residue that is critical for activation and E2 binding.
Iterative structure–activity optimization yielded compounds with nanomolar activity that enhanced T-cell activation and cytokine secretion in primary human T cells and suppressed tumor growth in a syngeneic colorectal mouse model.
Together, these studies validate the biological rationale for pharmacological CBL-B inhibition and enabled the de novo discovery of intramolecular CBL-B glue inhibitors.
This work culminated in the identification of NX-1607, a first-in-class oral CBL-B inhibitor now in clinical development for cancer immunotherapy.

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