From PARP1 to TNKS2 Inhibition: A Structure-Based Approach

ACS medicinal chemistry letters(2020)

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Abstract
Tankyrases (TNKSs) have recently gained great consideration as potential targets in Wnt/β-catenin pathway-dependent solid tumors. Previously, we reported the 2-mercaptoquinazolin-4-one MC2050 as a micromolar PARP1 inhibitor. Here we show how the resolution of the X-ray structure of PARP1 in complex with MC2050, combined with the computational investigation of the structural differences between TNKSs and PARP1/2 active sites, provided the rationale for a structure-based drug design campaign that with a limited synthetic effort led to the discovery of the bis-quinazolinone as a picomolar and selective TNKS2 inhibitor, endowed with antiproliferative effects in a colorectal cancer cell line (DLD-1) where the Wnt pathway is constitutively activated.
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Key words
Tankyrases,adenosine subpocket ligands,selective inhibition,quinazolinones,antitumor
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