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Activation of human STING by a molecular glue-like compound.

Nature chemical biology (2023-10-13)
Jie Li, Stephen M Canham, Hua Wu, Martin Henault, Lihao Chen, Guoxun Liu, Yu Chen, Gary Yu, Howard R Miller, Viktor Hornak, Scott M Brittain, Gregory A Michaud, Antonin Tutter, Wendy Broom, Mary Ellen Digan, Sarah M McWhirter, Kelsey E Sivick, Helen T Pham, Christine H Chen, George S Tria, Jeffery M McKenna, Markus Schirle, Xiaohong Mao, Thomas B Nicholson, Yuan Wang, Jeremy L Jenkins, Rishi K Jain, John A Tallarico, Sejal J Patel, Lianxing Zheng, Nathan T Ross, Charles Y Cho, Xuewu Zhang, Xiao-Chen Bai, Yan Feng
ABSTRACT

Stimulator of interferon genes (STING) is a dimeric transmembrane adapter protein that plays a key role in the human innate immune response to infection and has been therapeutically exploited for its antitumor activity. The activation of STING requires its high-order oligomerization, which could be induced by binding of the endogenous ligand, cGAMP, to the cytosolic ligand-binding domain. Here we report the discovery through functional screens of a class of compounds, named NVS-STGs, that activate human STING. Our cryo-EM structures show that NVS-STG2 induces the high-order oligomerization of human STING by binding to a pocket between the transmembrane domains of the neighboring STING dimers, effectively acting as a molecular glue. Our functional assays showed that NVS-STG2 could elicit potent STING-mediated immune responses in cells and antitumor activities in animal models.

MATERIALS
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Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
NVS-STG2, ≥98% (HPLC)