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Abstract B023: Inhibition of RAS signaling and tumorigenesis through targeting novel vulnerabilities

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RAS GTPases are important mediators of oncogenesis with nearly 30% of human tumors harboring mutant RAS proteins. However, pharmacological inhibition of RAS has proven challenging. We have employed Monobody technology… Click to show full abstract

RAS GTPases are important mediators of oncogenesis with nearly 30% of human tumors harboring mutant RAS proteins. However, pharmacological inhibition of RAS has proven challenging. We have employed Monobody technology to discover novel vulnerabilities in RAS that can be exploited to inhibit RAS signaling and tumorigenesis. Monobodies are single-domain synthetic binding proteins that achieve levels of affinity and selectivity similar to antibodies. In contrast to antibodies, Monobodies are fully functional in the reducing environment of the cytoplasm and thus are particularly suitable as genetically encoded “tool biologics”. We previously developed the NS1 Monobody that inhibited RAS by targeting the α4-α5 allosteric lobe to prevent RAS self-association and nanoclustering, and NS1 has become a widely used tool in the RAS research community. Following on this success, we sought to identify additional vulnerabilities in RAS. Based on our discovery that nucleotide-free RAS (apoRAS) inhibits PIK3C2B function, we assessed the feasibility of selectively targeting this state of RAS as an approach to inhibit oncogenic RAS function. Here, we have developed several Monobodies and extensively characterized one of them, R15. Although NS1 was agnostic to the nucleotide state of RAS, R15 bound exclusively to the apo state of all three RAS isoforms but did not interact with nucleotide-loaded RAS. When expressed in cells, R15 selectively inhibited the signaling and transforming activity of RAS mutants with elevated intrinsic nucleotide exchange rates (i.e., “fast exchange mutants”), such as G13D and Q61L. Surprisingly, R15 bound and inhibited RAS(G12D) mutants which are not reported to be fast exchange. Biochemical studies demonstrated that RAS captured with R15 from cell lysates was indeed nucleotide free, suggesting that R15 traps apoRAS and prevents nucleotide reloading. Finally, intracellularly expressed R15 selectively inhibited the tumor forming capacity of human cell lines driven by fast exchange RAS mutants but not RAS(G12V) in mouse xenografts. Thus, in contrast to conventional wisdom, our approach has established a new opportunity to selectively inhibit certain RAS mutants by targeting the apo state of RAS with drug-like molecules. Citation Format: Imran Kahn, Akiko Koide, Mariyam Zuberi, Gayatri Ketavarapu, Eric Denbaum, Kai Wen Teng, J. Matthew Rhett, Russell Spencer-Smith, G. Aaron Hobbs, Earnest Ramsay Camp, Shohei Koide, John P. O'Bryan. Inhibition of RAS signaling and tumorigenesis through targeting novel vulnerabilities [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference: Targeting RAS; 2023 Mar 5-8; Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Res 2023;21(5_Suppl):Abstract nr B023.

Keywords: signaling tumorigenesis; novel vulnerabilities; ras signaling; inhibition ras

Journal Title: Molecular Cancer Research
Year Published: 2023

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