The discovery of potent small molecule activators of human STING

The adaptor protein STING plays a major role in innate immune sensing of cytosolic nucleic acids, by triggering a robust interferon response. Despite the importance of this protein as a potential therapeutic target for serious unmet medical conditions including cancer and infectious disease there re...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of medicinal chemistry 2021-01, Vol.209, p.112869-112869, Article 112869
Hauptverfasser: Pryde, David C., Middya, Sandip, Banerjee, Monali, Shrivastava, Ritesh, Basu, Sourav, Ghosh, Rajib, Yadav, Dharmendra B., Surya, Arjun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The adaptor protein STING plays a major role in innate immune sensing of cytosolic nucleic acids, by triggering a robust interferon response. Despite the importance of this protein as a potential therapeutic target for serious unmet medical conditions including cancer and infectious disease there remains a paucity of STING ligands. Starting with a benzothiazinone series of weak STING activators (human EC50 ∼10 μM) we identified several chemotypes with sub-micromolar STING activity across all the major protein polymorphs. An example compound 53 based on an oxindole core structure demonstrated robust on-target functional activation of STING (human EC50 185 nM) in immortalised and primary cells and a cytokine induction fingerprint consistent with STING activation. Our study has identified several related series of potent small molecule human STING activators with potential to be developed as immunomodulatory therapeutics. [Display omitted] •Small molecule heterocyclic amides are potent activators of human STING.•Examples of the series directly activate the STING protein.•Examples of the series activate all major polymorphs of human STING.•STING activation with an example compound leads to significant cytokine induction.
ISSN:0223-5234
1768-3254
DOI:10.1016/j.ejmech.2020.112869