IRE1beta Inhibitors: Novel Therapeutics to Manage Excess Mucus in Asthma

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R41 · $299,999 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Over 25 million Americans have asthma, which places an economic burden on the U.S. of $81.9 billion. Airway mucus overproduction is a hallmark of asthma, and the quantity and tenacity of mucus are increased during airway exacerbations. Mucolytics degrade mucus, but do not reduce its production. Although corticosteroids and other anti-inflammatory therapies indirectly decrease mucus production, and anti-cholinergics inhibit mucus release from airway epithelia, a significant number of asthmatic continue to suffer from asthma exacerbations. Clear unmet medical need exists for new therapeutics that directly target airway mucus overproduction. Airway inflammation and excess mucins activate inositol requiring enzyme 1 (IRE1), a transmembrane endoplasmic reticulum protein that contains cytoplasmic kinase and RNase domains. IRE1 exists in two isoforms, α and β. IRE1α is ubiquitously expressed, but IRE1β is only expressed in mucous cells of the respiratory and GI tracts. Key residues in the kinase ligand binding pocket differ for the two isozymes. Activation of IRE1β (but not IRE1α) kinase and RNase is required for airway mucin production. IRE1β (but not IRE1α) expression is up-regulated in asthmatic human bronchial epithelia (HBE), providing an amplifying mechanism for airway exacerbations due to mucus overproduction. Irex Pharma has developed novel IRE1β- specific assays to support a full synthetic medicinal chemistry campaign to identify potent, selective and efficacious IRE1β inhibitors to treat airway mucus overproduction. Our focused testing of IRE1 ligands revealed a distinct mechanism for blocking IRE1β-dependent mucin production. Most IRE1 kinase inhibitors tested activate the IRE1 RNase. We identified an IRE1β ligand that blocks both kinase and RNase activities and mucin production in HBE, providing proof-of-concept that a small molecule IRE1β ligand with this profile can block mucus overproduction in human airways. Aim 1 proposes to use structure-based design to guide the synthesis of novel analogs based on our current hits. Structure-activity relationships will be established using an iterative approach. Our goal is to identify nontoxic, patentable, nanomolar compound(s) using our team's extensive knowledge of kinase inhibitor design, computational chemistry, synthetic chemistry, and novel IRE1 assays. Aim 2 proposes to test our IRE1β inhibitors with favorable profiles for ability to reduce 1) interleukin-13 (IL-13)-stimulated MUC5AC production in HBE cultures and 2) house dust mite (HDM; an in vivo stimulus relevant to asthma)-induced airway mucin overproduction and hyper-responsiveness in mice. PK, early ADMET and kinase selectivity will be obtained for top compounds. Our goal is to identify a patentable IRE1β inhibitor able to reduce IL-13-increased MUC5AC in HBE and able to lower HDM-induced MUC5AC production and hyper-responsiveness in mouse airways with favorable potency, selectivity, toxicity and developability profiles....

Key facts

NIH application ID
9918873
Project number
5R41AI142847-02
Recipient
IREX PHARMA, LLC
Principal Investigator
Emily Arthur Hull-Ryde
Activity code
R41
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$299,999
Award type
5
Project period
2019-04-19 → 2023-03-31