Mutations in RAS proteins appear in nearly 19% of cancer patients, and the past decade has delivered therapeutic progress: five approved drugs and more than ten in clinical trials as of 2025. Yet acquired resistance remains a stubborn obstacle. Secondary mutations at residues such as Q61, Y96, H95, and Y64 can disable both Switch-II inhibitors, SW2i, and cyclophilin A molecular glues. The α4-β6-α5 surface of H/KRAS offers a structurally distinct escape route: this allosteric lobe is the binding site of the NS1 monobody, which disrupts RAS nanoclustering and downstream ERK signaling without touching the nucleotide pocket. Because NS1 is roughly 10 kDa and cannot reach intracellular RAS, the open question has been whether smaller molecules can recapitulate its binding logic.
Researchers in the Therrien and Marinier Groups at the Institute for Research in Immunology and Cancer, Université de Montréal, published in ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters, used structure-based drug design to develop 10-mer macrocyclic peptides mimicking the NS1 FG-loop. Starting from the NS1–HRAS cocrystal structure (PDB 5E95), they applied site-directed mutagenesis to establish Trp75 and Tyr82 of the FG-loop as critical affinity determinants, then engineered conformational restriction through four modifications: cyclization with an Aib or β-amino isovaleric acid linker, inversion of Trp75 to D-Trp, a Gly79-to-D-Pro swap enforcing a type II' β-turn, and His78-to-Lys for solubility. A homogeneous tryptophan-quenching fluorescence assay, exploiting the absence of Trp in H/KRAS, measured dissociation constants across the series.
Conformational restriction proved decisive. The linear FG-loop sequence showed no detectable HRAS binding by NMR, while a macrocyclic analog bearing D-Trp at position 75 produced measurable chemical-shift perturbations. Iterative optimization yielded compound 2, at an HRAS KD of 66 μM, more than a 5-fold gain over the initial hit. The team then placed electrophilic warheads at position AA80 to engage Cys118 of HRAS, whose side chain sits within 4 Å of NS1 Gln80 in the cocrystal. One bromoacetamide analog reached complete labeling of wild-type HRAS by LC/MS against only 24% in a C118S control, and showed no cross-reactivity with RALA and RHOG, two related RAS-family GTPases, confirming Cys118 selectivity. X-ray costructures of three covalent analogs confirmed engagement at the α4-β6-α5 interface and guided warhead and linker geometry.
A pocket adjacent to Cys118, opened by an N5-benzyl-L-glutamine substituent at AA80, then guided a noncovalent campaign. Compound 11 bound HRAS at a KD of 4.4 μM and KRAS at 18 μM, 15-fold and 7.2-fold gains over compound 2. Adding D-Arg at position 79 and a C2-methylated Trp at position 83 delivered lead analog 14, at HRAS KD 1.9 μM and KRAS KD 2.7 μM, confirmed independently by surface plasmon resonance. Across both isoforms, the oncogenic variants G12D, G12V, G13R, and Q61K, and GTP-analog-loaded states, compound 14 held KD values in the 1.4 to 9.0 μM range, the binding resistance-agnostic and nucleotide-state independent. Alanine scanning showed that Trp77 and Tyr82 occupy adjacent sub-pockets on helix α4, which a single chimeric amino acid could satisfy together.
The work establishes the α4-β6-α5 allosteric lobe as a tractable target for macrocyclic inhibitors that hold affinity across the nucleotide states and resistance mutants which defeat current clinical agents. The covalent analog SP129 labeled H/KRAS in cell lysates with submicromolar potency, IC50 0.7 μM, though fluorescence imaging of a TAMRA-labeled probe indicated that endosomal escape, rather than biochemical potency, currently limits activity in live cells. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest the macrocyclic backbone forms stable intramolecular hydrogen bonds, a basis for chameleonicity tuning through backbone N-methylation and reduced side-chain polarity. That two critical pharmacophores can merge into a single chimeric residue offers a path from constrained peptide toward a lower-molecular-weight inhibitor of a resistance-agnostic RAS site.