Development of an orally bioavailable covalent STING inhibitor

03 October 2024, Version 1

Abstract

Pharmacological inhibition of cGAS-STING-controlled innate immune pathway is an emerging therapeutic strategy for a myriad of inflammatory diseases, including autoimmune disease, ulcerative colitis, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and aging-related neurodegeneration. Here we report GHN105 as an orally bioavailable covalent STING inhibitor. Late-stage diversification of the briarane-type diterpenoid excavatolide B allowed the installation of solubility-enhancing functional groups while enhancing its activity as a covalent STING inhibitor against multiple human STING variants, including the S154 variant responsible for a genetic autoimmune disease. Selectively engaging the membrane-proximal Cys91 residue of STING, GHN105 dose-dependently inhibited cGAS-STING signaling and type I interferon responses in cells and in vivo. Orally administered GHN105 exerted marked therapeutic efficacy and reversed key pathological features in a delayed-treatment acute colitis mouse model. Notably, we also showed that GHN105 covalently engaged STING in the colon tissues. Our study provided proof of concept that synthetic briarane analog GHN105 serves as a safe and orally active covalent STING inhibitor. With a growing number of chronic inflammatory diseases linked to aberrant STING activation, orally bioavailable STING inhibitors would benefit patients by lowering the infection risk from frequent injections while allowing long-term systemic administration.

Keywords

cGAS-STING
Marine natural product
Briarane-type diterpenoid
Late-stage diversification
oral covalent inhibitor

Supplementary materials

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Title
Development of an orally bioavailable covalent STING inhibitor
Description
Supplementary Figures and Tables ……………………....................................……..... 1-5 Material and Methods ………………..…......……....................................................... 6-15 Synthetic procedures and X-ray characterization of compounds ……,..…............… 16-77 Copies of 1H, 13C NMR, mass spectra, and HPLC traces ……....…………............ 78-149 Supplementary References.
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