Q2 · BIOLOGY
Article
Author: Cantone, Nico R ; Stuckey, Jacob I ; Brenneman, Jehrod ; Moine, Ludivine ; Gehling, Victor S ; Levell, Julian R ; Mertz, Jennifer A ; Trojer, Patrick ; Audia, James E ; Vivat, Valerie ; Cummings, Richard T ; Sims, Robert J ; Côté, Alexandre ; Arora, Shilpi ; Khanna, Avinash ; Ramakrishnan, Ashwin
The histone methyltransferase EZH2 has been the target of numerous small-molecule inhibitor discovery efforts over the last 10+ years. Emerging clinical data have provided early evidence for single agent activity with acceptable safety profiles for first-generation inhibitors. We have developed kinetic methodologies for studying EZH2-inhibitor-binding kinetics that have allowed us to identify a unique structural modification that results in significant increases in the drug-target residence times of all EZH2 inhibitor scaffolds we have studied. The unexpected residence time enhancement bestowed by this modification has enabled us to create a series of second-generation EZH2 inhibitors with sub-pM binding affinities. We provide both biophysical evidence validating this sub-pM potency and biological evidence demonstrating the utility and relevance of such high-affinity interactions with EZH2.