Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Researchers develop first-in-class inhibitors against key leukemia protein

05.14.21 | Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

GoPro HERO13 Black

GoPro HERO13 Black records stabilized 5.3K video for instrument deployments, field notes, and outreach, even in harsh weather and underwater conditions.


The protein made by the ASH1L gene plays a key role in the development of acute leukemia, along with other diseases. The ASH1L protein, however, has been challenging to target therapeutically.

Now a team of researchers led by Jolanta Grembecka, Ph.D., and Tomasz Cierpicki, Ph.D., from the University of Michigan has developed first-in-class small molecules to inhibit ASH1L's SET domain -- preventing critical molecular interactions in the development and progression of leukemia.

The team's findings, which used fragment-based screening, followed by medicinal chemistry and a structure-based design, appear in Nature Communications .

In mouse models of mixed lineage leukemia, the lead compound, known as AS-99, successfully reduced leukemia progression.

"This work points to a new, exiting avenue to develop new therapeutic agents against acute leukemia, as well as providing a new approach to further study the biological functions of ASH1L and its role in the development of the disease," says Grembecka, associate professor of pathology at Michigan Medicine and co-director of the developmental therapeutics program at the U-M Rogel Cancer Center.

The study was a close collaboration between her lab and the lab of co-senior author Cierpicki, an associate professor of biophysics and pathology.

###

Paper citied: "Discovery of first-in-class inhibitors of ASH1L histone methyltransferase with anti-leukemic activity," Nature Communications . DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23152-6

Nature Communications

10.1038/s41467-021-23152-6

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan. (2021, May 14). Researchers develop first-in-class inhibitors against key leukemia protein. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1ZZKO6Y1/researchers-develop-first-in-class-inhibitors-against-key-leukemia-protein.html
MLA:
"Researchers develop first-in-class inhibitors against key leukemia protein." Brightsurf News, May. 14 2021, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1ZZKO6Y1/researchers-develop-first-in-class-inhibitors-against-key-leukemia-protein.html.