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Join
over 200 of your colleagues and register today!
Stay on to attend Structure-Based
Design (June 6 - 8)
Sunday, June 3
5:00–6:00 pm Early Conference Registration
Monday, June 4
7:30 am Registration and Morning Coffee
8:30 Chairperson’s Opening Remarks

8:35 Discovery of Novel Classes of Orally Bioavailable Kinase
Inhibitors which Inhibit TIE-2
Richard Luke, Ph.D., CIRA, AstraZeneca
Tie-2 is a tyrosine kinase that is believed to be involved in angiogenesis and thereby
growth of human tumours. The discovery and SAR of a novel class of imidazolealkene-
pyrimidine kinase inhibitors is reported that inhibit Tie-2 in vitro and in cells.
These compounds are lead-like, with low molecular weight, good physical properties,
oral bioavailability and in vivo activity. Developments in this series leading to
further novel series of kinase inhibitors will be discussed. Issues with showing in vivo
activity of Tie-2 inhibitors will be addressed.
9:05 Kinase Targets Involved in Cancer Progression
Richard Klemke, Ph.D., Department of Pathology, University of California,
San Diego
We have used large scale quantitative mass spectrometry and IMAC to identify
unique kinases and substrates of kinases that are altered during cancer progression
and cell metastasis. We have identified a novel cytoskeletal associated tyrosine
kinase that mediates cancer cell invasion. This enzyme is upregulated in metastastic
colon and pancreatic cancer cells in 70-80% of patients. This kinase is an excellent
biomarker and target for drug discovery.
9:35 Fragment-Based Discovery of Selective, Orally
Bioavailable Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors for Targeted Treatment of Human Cancers
Stephen K. Burley, Chief Scientific Officer and Senior Vice President
Research, SGX Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
SGX Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (SGX) has developed a fragment based drug discovery
platform that utilizes high-throughput X-ray crystallography for lead identification/optimization. The proprietary FAST™ (Fragments of Active Structures)
process exploits crystallographic screening to detect, visualize, identify and optimize
small ligands (MW 150-200) that are bound to the target protein. Successful applications
of the FAST™ fragment-based lead discovery/optimization process will be presented for a portfolio of well validated oncology targets.
10:05 Coffee Break, Exhibit and Poster Viewing
10:45 EphB/RAF Kinase Inhibitors for the Treatment of Cancer
Alcide Barberis, Ph.D., Chief Executive Officer, Oncalis AG
Through a novel yeast cell-based assay applied to a high-throughput screen (HTS)
we have selected kinase inhibitors that target members of the EphB receptor tyrosine
kinase family as well as the key cytoplasmic kinases RAF. The positive read-out
of the applied cellular HTS rapidly selects for multi-target kinase inhibitors that are
endowed with favorable properties such as cell permeability, solubility and metabolic
stability, and against generally cytotoxic compounds, thus significantly facilitating
hit to lead optimization. Consistent with this selection step, further characterization
of the EphB/RAF inhibitors, which inhibit both kinase types with IC50 of ~200nM,
showed good stability in human hepatocytes, as well as oral bioavailability and
appropriate pharmacokinetics in mice. The selectivity profile of these inhibitors is
particularly favorable to their application for the treatment of selected tumors.
Preclinical data will be presented and discussed.
11:15 Technology Highlights
(Sponsorship Available)
11:30 BLOCK or LOCK:
Complementary Approaches to Targeting Macromolecular Interactions
David Borhani, Ph.D., Group Leader, Department of Chemistry, Abbott Bioresearch Center
11:45 Discovery of Novel Potent and Selective Polo-Like
Kinase Inhibitors
Campbell McInnes, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Pharmaceutical Sciences,
University of South Carolina
Polo like kinases (Plks) have numerous functions in mitosis, are overexpresssed in
many tumor types and are thus considered to be validated anti-tumor targets. Small
molecule Plk inhibitors would therefore be beneficial in the development of targeted
cancer therapeutics and should also be valuable as probes to determine cellular
phenotypes of Plk inhibition. Through homology modelling of the Plk1 kinase domain, a chemical series based on benzthiazole N-oxide, has been discovered that
displays potent and selective Plk1 inhibition. The effects of an optimized analogue,
Cyclapolin 1 on purified centrosomes, indicate that Plks are required to generate
MPM2 epitopes, recruit gamma-tubulin and enable nucleation of microtubules. Treatment of living S2 cells with Compound 1 leads to collapsed spindles in contrast
to the metaphase arrested bipolar spindles seen following RNAi. The differential cellular
response to protein depletion and protein
inhibition and impact on the development of anti-tumour agents is discussed.
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12:15 pm
Lunch and Learn Workshop
Cell-based and Biochemical Assay Tools for the Discovery of JAK
Inhibitors
Melissa Krueger, Senior Profiling/Screening Product Manager, Marketing, Invitrogen
To promote discovery of inhibitors specific to the individual JAK/STAT family members in the areas of oncology and immune suppression, we have expressed and purified each JAK kinase (JAK1, JAK2, JAK3, and TYK2), including JAK2 V617F. We have also developed and validated functional biochemical assays for each enzyme using a TR- FRET format. In addition, we have designed complementary cell based assays that allow interrogation of JAK/STAT pathways by incorporation of the beta lactamase reporter gene downstream of a variety of relevant response elements. Data from this suite of tools will be presented to demonstrate its application to discovery of JAK inhibitors and its compatibility with HTS. |
Sponsored
by

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1:40 Chairperson’s Remarks
1:45 Dlgh1 MAGUK Coordinates “Alternative” p38 Activation,
Directing Proximal TCR Kinases to Activation of NFAT, but not NFkB
M. Carrie Miceli, Ph.D., Associate Professor, MIMG, UCLA
Tyrosine kinase activation couples TCR engagement to discrete signaling cascades
capable of differentially contributing to functional outcome. However, mechanisms
of channeling TCR signals toward specific targets remain undefined. TCR stimulation utilizes MKK independent “alternative”-p38-activation, whereby
Lck/Zap70 directly activate p38 activation. We report that alternatively-activatedp38
associates with Dlgh1 and have identified Dlgh1/Lck/ZAP70 complexes, raising
the possibility that Dlgh1 coordinates alternative-p38-activation. Manipulation
of T-cell Dlgh1 levels affects alternative-p38 and NFAT, but not JNK or NFkB, activation.
p38-binding-deficient-Dlgh1 can not support p38 or NFAT activation and p38 inhibitor ablates Dlgh1-NFAT upregulation. Therefore, Dlgh1 selectively couples
proximal TCR-kinases to p38-mediated NFAT activation. Together with reports that CARMA1 coordinates JNK and NFkB, but not p38 or NFAT activation,
our findings identify MAGUKs as orchestrators of TCR signal specificity.
2:15 Translational Studies with the EGFR Inhibitor Erlotinib
Neil Gibson, Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer, OSI Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Perhaps the greatest improvement in the treatment of advanced non-small cell lung
cancer (NSCLC) patients has been achieved with the EGFR inhibitor erlotinib. In a
2nd and 3rd line setting (the BR21 trial) erlotinib was found to increase survival in a
large unselected patient population with a very acceptable side effect profile.
Numerous clinical and translational studies are helping to increase our understanding
of “biomarkers” that may be useful in either selecting patients for future trials or
that can help us measure response to therapy. As we better understand the signaling
pathways in which these biomarkers are involved we are likely to be able to design better and more relevant combinations of molecular targeted therapies.

2:45 Purine-Based Inhibitors of Bcr-Abl and its Mutants
Yihan Wang, Ph.D., Principal Scientist, Department of Chemistry, ARIAD
Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Purine and so-called Morphed purines are common templates for therapeutic
agents, especially targeted agents as protein kinase inhibitors. ARIAD over the years
developed several purine-based chemotypes as dual Src/Abl kinase inhibitors for
CML and cancer metastasis. For CML, emergence of resistence to the current agent
Gleevec poses big challenge to the current treatment, mainly due to the fact that
point mutations in the catalytic domain renders the drug inactive. Effective strategies
were developed to combat the resistence, one among them is the development of
potent dual Src/Abl inhibitors. Through our program of structure-guided design, we
have identified a series of compounds that inhibit most of the mutant including T315I
both in vitro and in vivo. Such compounds have the potential to become effective
treatment for Gleevec refractory CML and other cancer.
3:15 Refreshment Break, Exhibit and Poster Viewing
4:00 “Addiction” to Oncogenic Kinases in Human Cancer
Jeffrey Settleman, Ph.D., Professor of Medicine, Center for Molecular Therapeutics,
Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center and Harvard Medical School
We have identified a class of activating mutations of the epidermal growth factor
receptor (EGFR) gene in human lung tumors, whose presence is correlated with dramatic
clinical responses to selective EGFR kinase inhibitors in a subset of treated
patients. Although clinical responses can be rapid and dramatic, the average duration
is only ~6 months due to acquired drug-resistance, and we have begun to identify
mechanisms by which resistance to drug treatment can arise. In addition, our
studies of “oncogene addiction” have led to a novel hypothesis regarding the mechanism
by which tumor cells are killed in response to molecularly targeted drug treatments,
which we describe as “oncogenic shock,” and may have implications for strategies to target human cancers therapeutically.
4:30 In vivo Genetic Approaches to Identify Mechanisms of
Resistance to Inhibition of ErbB-family Receptor Tyrosine Kinases
Ronan O’Hagan, Group Leader, Target Validation/Biology, AVEO Pharamaceuticals, Inc.
This presentation describes an in vivo genetic screen to identify novel cancer targets
including kinases. Moreover, the context of the genetic screen, and subsequent
work-up of specific receptor-tyrosine kinase targets illustrate alternative pathways
that circumvent current therapeutic targets and therefore represent genetic mechanisms
of acquired or de novo drug resistance. Hence these proteins enable a priori
identification of the genetic context of patients in which current therapeutics are likely
to fail or succeed. Moreover, these proteins themselves represent candidate targets
in cancers that are, or become, resistant to inhibition of the primary driving
oncogene.
5:00 Happy Hour in Exhibit Hall
6:00 End of Day One
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