Yan Huang, Miao Liu, Dongguang Fan, Fan Xu, Fushuang Xiang, Qingqiang Min, and Xingyue Ji
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2026
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6c00226
A blog highlighting recent publications in the area of covalent modification of proteins, particularly relating to covalent-modifier drugs. @CovalentMod on Twitter, @covalentmod@mstdn.science on Mastodon, and @covalentmod.bsky.social on BlueSky
Yan Huang, Miao Liu, Dongguang Fan, Fan Xu, Fushuang Xiang, Qingqiang Min, and Xingyue Ji
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2026
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6c00226
He Chen, Rudra Prasad Dutta, Zhizhong Li, Yue Zhong, Anqi Ma, Kwang-Su Park, Jithesh Kottur, Alison Park, Nicolas Babault, Ke Wang, Dandan Wang, Yan Xiong, H. Ümit Kaniskan, Minkui Luo, Samir Parekh, and Jian Jin
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2026
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5c02958
Dysregulated signaling of SET domain-containing protein 8 (SETD8) has been implicated in tumorigenesis, yet most SETD8 inhibitors exhibited limited cellular efficacy. Herein, we developed a potent and selective SETD8 covalent inhibitor, MS2928 (3), featuring a propiolamide covalent warhead. Compound 3 potently and selectively inhibited SETD8 methyltransferase activity. The covalent inhibition mechanism of 3 was confirmed by mass spectrometry and X-ray crystallography. Moreover, 3 significantly reduced the histone H4 lysine 20 monomethylation (H4K20me1) levels in cells and robustly inhibited the proliferation of SETD8-overexpressing multiple myeloma (MM) cell lines with no significant antiproliferative effect on SETD8-low expressing MM cells and normal cells. Importantly, 3 effectively inhibited tumor growth in vivo in two xenograft mouse models of SETD8-overexpressing MM cell lines. Collectively, our results establish 3 as a valuable chemical tool for exploring the biological functions of SETD8 and pave the way for further development of novel epigenetic therapies for MM.
Jiheng Jiang, Dongyang He, Mengyu Ke, Jinhua Qin, Guang Yang, Biao Yu, Jing Wang & Pengfei Fang
Nat Commun (2026).
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-68971-7
Core fucosylation, catalyzed by fucosyltransferase 8 (FUT8), plays critical roles in cancer progression, immune evasion, and drug resistance, making it a compelling therapeutic target. However, development of selective FUT8 inhibitors has been hindered by shared substrate specificity of fucosyltransferases. Here, we report the discovery of a previously unrecognized allosteric site on FUT8 and the development of a low-toxicity covalent inhibitor, CAIF (stearic acid-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester-dimethylimidazolium bromide), through structure-based drug design. High-throughput screening and crystallographic studies reveal that small molecules such as NH125 bind to a channel-like allosteric pocket, inducing conformational changes that disrupt FUT8 activity. Leveraging these insights, we design CAIF to covalently target lysine K216 within the allosteric site. CAIF exhibits minimal cytotoxicity and significantly inhibits core fucosylation and cancer cell invasion in cellular assays. This work establishes CAIF as a lead compound for further optimization and development, offering a framework for targeting glycosyltransferases through allosteric and covalent inhibition strategies.
Matthew L. Condakes, Zhuo Zhang, Derek B. Danahy, Richard R. Moore, Sirish Kaushik Lakkaraju, Xiaoliang Zhuo, Yuka Amako, Robert M. Borzilleri, Srividya B. Balachander, Lisa Chourb, Rita L. Civiello, Ashok R. Dongre, Daniel P. Downes, Dieter M. Drexler, Brianne M. Dudiak, Liudmila Dzhekieva, Miriam El-Samin, Brian E. Fink, Kosea Frederick, Cherrie Huang, Javed Khan, Emma Lees, Christopher G. Levins, Courtney McCarthy, Michelle L. Stewart
Nat Commun (2026).
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-69003-0
The discovery of KRAS G12C inactive state inhibitors represented a significant advancement in the field of precision oncology. While inactive state inhibition shows promise in patients, Switch II (SWII)-binding inhibitors targeting both inactive and active states remain an underdeveloped therapeutic modality. Here, we describe the discovery of such KRAS G12C dual inhibitors that bind the SWII allosteric site using a chemically differentiated warhead to covalently modify both the KRAS G12C inactive and active states. Co-crystal structures reveal that these inhibitors perturb a key water-mediated hydrogen bonding network and trigger allosteric remodeling of the GTP-bound protein surface and SWI that prevents binding to downstream effectors. Consistent with simultaneous targeting of the active and inactive states, dual inhibitors provide rapid covalent target engagement and suppression of MAPK signaling. However, they demonstrate similar efficacy in cellular and in vivo models when compared to inactive state-selective ones despite faster target inactivation. Furthermore, both inhibitor classes show similar cellular efficacy in the presence of growth factors that drive KRAS, wt NRAS, and wt HRAS to the active state. These data provide the first detailed account of targeting both the active and inactive states of KRAS G12C and highlight the absence of a mechanistic advantage in contexts dependent on prolonged target inhibition.
Richard Ede and Kerstin E Peterson and Richard Begyinah and Irin P Tom and Jason Ochoada and Molly Sneddon and Marcus Fischer and Anang A Shelat and William C K Pomerantz
ChemRxiv. 2026.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.26434/chemrxiv.10001717/v1
Epigenetics is defined by changes in heritable phenotypes that do not involve a change in DNA sequence. P300/CBP-associated factor (PCAF) is an important epigenetic regulatory protein that can alter chromatin through a histone acetyltransferase domain, while also serving as an epigenetic reader through a C-terminal bromodomain. PCAF promotes the transcription of the HIV-1 genome and is implicated in the development of glioblastoma. The currently reported PCAF inhibitors are non-covalent and require high concentration to maintain target occupancy. Here, we explore a new approach using covalent inhibition. Starting with a lead scaffold (BZ1), test-molecules were rationally designed for selectively targeting PCAF by installing lysine-reactive groups onto the lead scaffold to enable covalent bond formation with the non-conserved lysine residue in the PCAF bromodomain. The inhibition, selectivity, and kinetic properties (kinact/KI) of these molecules were evaluated using intact protein mass spectrometry, while biophysical, and cellular data were employed to verify covalent mechanism and in-cell target engagement. After optimization, we developed the first PCAF covalent inhibitor, 10, which labeled PCAF covalently in vitro and engages PCAF in cells. The covalent inhibitor, 10, represents a useful starting point for future inhibitor optimization and heterobifunctional molecule development.
Targeted covalent inhibitors (TCIs) are increasingly popular as drug candidates and chemical probes. Among current TCIs, the chemistry is largely limited to cysteine and lysine side chain reactivity. Here, we investigated the utility of cyclic imine Mannich electrophiles as covalent warheads to target protein tyrosine and tryptophan side chains. We characterized the intrinsic reaction rates of several cyclic imines to tyrosine and other amino acid side chains and validated reactivity using protein affinity labeling of a cyclic imine-modified trimethoprim with tyrosine and tryptophan mutants of E. coli dihydrofolate reductase. To validate the utility of the approach, we appended cyclic imine warheads to a CBX8 chromodomain inhibitor to label a non-conserved tyrosine, which improved both the potency and selectivity of the inhibitor for CBX8 in vitro and in cells. These findings indicate that Mannich electrophiles are promising and robust chemical warheads for tyrosine and tryptophan bioconjugation and development of covalent inhibitors.
Antony J. Burton, Louis S. Chupak, Alison J. Davis, Ahmed S. A. Mady, Mirco Meniconi, Barry Teobald, Bryan W. Dorsey, Lauren R. Byrne, Ryan Mulhern, Berent Lundeen, Elizabeth W. Sorensen, Bharti Patel, Sean Brennan, Dhiraj Kormocha, Ruben Tommasi, Graham L. Simpson, Jeffrey W. Keillor, Laura D’Agostino, Pearl S. Huang, Elayne Penebre
bioRxiv 2026.01.26.701341;
doi: https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.01.26.701341
Yan Huang, Miao Liu, Dongguang Fan, Fan Xu, Fushuang Xiang, Qingqiang Min, and Xingyue Ji Journal of the American Chemical Society 2026 DOI:...