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Beyond KRAS(G12C): Biochemical and Computational Characterization of Sotorasib and Adagrasib Binding Specificity and the Critical Role of H95 and Y96

Mahran, Randa; Kapp, Jonas N; Valtonen, Salla; Champagne, Allison; Ning, Jinying; Gillette, William; Stephen, Andrew G; Hao, Feng; Plückthun, Andreas; Härmä, Harri; Pantsar, Tatu; Kopra, Kari (2024). Beyond KRAS(G12C): Biochemical and Computational Characterization of Sotorasib and Adagrasib Binding Specificity and the Critical Role of H95 and Y96. ACS Chemical Biology, 19(10):2152-2164.

Abstract

Mutated KRAS proteins are frequently expressed in some of the most lethal human cancers and thus have been a target of intensive drug discovery efforts for decades. Lately, KRAS(G12C) switch-II pocket (SII-P)-targeting covalent small molecule inhibitors have finally reached clinical practice. Sotorasib (AMG-510) was the first FDA-approved covalent inhibitor to treat KRAS(G12C)-positive nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC), followed soon by adagrasib (MRTX849). Both drugs target the GDP-bound state of KRAS(G12C), exploiting the strong nucleophilicity of acquired cysteine. Here, we evaluate the similarities and differences between sotorasib and adagrasib in their RAS SII-P binding by applying biochemical, cellular, and computational methods. Exact knowledge of SII-P engagement can enable targeting this site by reversible inhibitors for KRAS mutants beyond G12C. We show that adagrasib is strictly KRAS- but not KRAS(G12C)-specific due to its strong and unreplaceable interaction with H95. Unlike adagrasib, sotorasib is less dependent on H95 for its binding, making it a RAS isoform-agnostic compound, having a similar functionality also with NRAS and HRAS G12C mutants. Our results emphasize the accessibility of SII-P beyond oncogenic G12C and aid in understanding the molecular mechanism behind the clinically observed drug resistance, associated especially with secondary mutations on KRAS H95 and Y96.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Biochemistry
07 Faculty of Science > Department of Biochemistry
Dewey Decimal Classification:570 Life sciences; biology
610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Life Sciences > Biochemistry
Life Sciences > Molecular Medicine
Language:English
Date:18 October 2024
Deposited On:06 Oct 2024 15:02
Last Modified:30 May 2025 01:39
Publisher:American Chemical Society (ACS)
ISSN:1554-8929
OA Status:Closed
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.4c00315
PubMed ID:39283696

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