Department of Pediatrics, Division of Hematology-Oncology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA.
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA.
Biochem Pharmacol. 2023 Oct;216:115751. doi: 10.1016/j.bcp.2023.115751. Epub 2023 Aug 16.
The RET (REarranged during Transfection) gene, which encodes for a transmembrane receptor tyrosine kinase, is an established oncogene associated with the etiology and progression of multiple types of cancer. Oncogenic RET mutations and rearrangements resulting in gene fusions have been identified in many adult cancers, including medullary and papillary thyroid cancers, lung adenocarcinomas, colon and breast cancers, and many others. While genetic RET aberrations are much less common in pediatric solid tumors, increased RET expression has been shown to be associated with poor prognosis in children with solid tumors such as neuroblastoma, prompting an interest in RET inhibition as a form of therapy for these children. A number of kinase inhibitors currently in use for patients with cancer have RET inhibitory activity, but these inhibitors also display activity against other kinases, resulting in unwanted side effects and limiting their safety and efficacy. Recent efforts have been focused on developing more specific RET inhibitors, but due to high levels of conservation between kinase binding pockets, specificity remains a drug design challenge. Here, we review the background of RET as a potential therapeutic target in neuroblastoma tumors and the results of recent preclinical studies and clinical trials evaluating the safety and efficacy of RET inhibition in adults and children. We also present a novel approach to drug discovery leveraging the chemical phenomenon of atropisomerism to develop specific RET inhibitors and present preliminary data demonstrating the efficacy of a novel RET inhibitor against neuroblastoma tumor cells.
RET(转染重排)基因,编码跨膜受体酪氨酸激酶,是与多种癌症的病因和进展相关的既定癌基因。致癌性 RET 突变和导致基因融合的重排已在许多成人癌症中被鉴定,包括甲状腺髓样癌和甲状腺乳头状癌、肺腺癌、结肠癌和乳腺癌等。虽然遗传 RET 异常在儿科实体瘤中较为少见,但已有研究表明,RET 表达增加与儿童实体瘤(如神经母细胞瘤)的预后不良相关,促使人们对 RET 抑制作为这些儿童的一种治疗形式产生兴趣。目前有许多用于癌症患者的激酶抑制剂具有 RET 抑制活性,但这些抑制剂也对其他激酶显示活性,导致不必要的副作用,并限制了它们的安全性和疗效。最近的努力集中在开发更特异的 RET 抑制剂,但由于激酶结合口袋之间高度保守,特异性仍然是药物设计的挑战。在这里,我们回顾了 RET 作为神经母细胞瘤肿瘤潜在治疗靶点的背景,以及最近评估 RET 抑制在成人和儿童中的安全性和疗效的临床前研究和临床试验的结果。我们还提出了一种利用化学现象旋光异构来开发特异性 RET 抑制剂的新方法,并展示了初步数据,证明了一种新型 RET 抑制剂对神经母细胞瘤肿瘤细胞的疗效。