posted on 2022-05-10, 14:09authored byNicky
J. Willis, William Mahy, James Sipthorp, Yuguang Zhao, Hannah L. Woodward, Benjamin N. Atkinson, Elliott D. Bayle, Fredrik Svensson, Sarah Frew, Fiona Jeganathan, Amy Monaghan, Stefano Benvegnù, Sarah Jolly, Luca Vecchia, Reinis R. Ruza, Svend Kjær, Steven Howell, Ambrosius P. Snijders, Magda Bictash, Patricia C. Salinas, Jean-Paul Vincent, E. Yvonne Jones, Paul Whiting, Paul V. Fish
Notum is a carboxylesterase
that suppresses Wnt signaling through
deacylation of an essential palmitoleate group on Wnt proteins. There
is a growing understanding of the role Notum plays in human diseases
such as colorectal cancer and Alzheimer’s disease, supporting
the need to discover improved inhibitors, especially for use in models
of neurodegeneration. Here, we have described the discovery and profile
of 8l (ARUK3001185) as a potent, selective, and brain-penetrant
inhibitor of Notum activity suitable for oral dosing in rodent models
of disease. Crystallographic fragment screening of the Diamond-SGC
Poised Library for binding to Notum, supported by a biochemical enzyme
assay to rank inhibition activity, identified 6a and 6b as a pair of outstanding hits. Fragment development of 6 delivered 8l that restored Wnt signaling in
the presence of Notum in a cell-based reporter assay. Assessment in
pharmacology screens showed 8l to be selective against
serine hydrolases, kinases, and drug targets.