AI Developed ISM3830 a New CBLB Inhibitor
Insilico Medicine has nominated ISM3830, a potentially best-in-class oral CBLB inhibitor discovered through its proprietary Chemistry42 AI platform, as a preclinical candidate for advanced cancer immunotherapy.
This novel molecule targets Casitas B-lineage lymphoma-b (CBLB), an intracellular E3 ubiquitin ligase that acts as a master negative regulator of T-cell and natural killer (NK) cell activation, distinct from conventional surface checkpoint inhibitors like PD-1 or CTLA-4. By blocking CBLB, ISM3830 restores exhausted T-cell function, enhances anti-tumor immunity, and overcomes tumor-induced immunosuppression in preclinical models, demonstrating robust activity across multiple solid tumors with improved pharmacokinetics, oral bioavailability, and a favorable safety profile compared to prior candidates.
The development of ISM3830 exemplifies AI-accelerated drug discovery, leveraging over 40 generative models within Chemistry42 for structure-based design guided by CBLB cocrystal structures, yielding a unique scaffold with only 0.42 similarity to existing molecules. Preclinical data show potent in vivo anti-tumor effects, long-term tumor immunity in rechallenge models, and synergy potential with checkpoint inhibitors, chemotherapies, and targeted agents, positioning it for IND-enabling studies and first-in-human trials in advanced solid tumors within 18-24 months. Published in the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, the underlying series validation highlights iterative optimization for potency, selectivity, and druggability, addressing historical CBLB inhibitor challenges like metabolism and absorption.
For prostate cancer, particularly metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), ISM3830 holds substantial promise due to the disease’s “cold” tumor microenvironment characterized by low T-cell infiltration, minimal PD-L1 expression, and profound T-cell exhaustion marked by co-expression of PD-1, Tim-3, and other inhibitory receptors. Conventional PD-1 inhibitors yield objective response rates of just 3-5% in unselected mCRPC patients, underscoring the need for novel intracellular approaches.
Emerging clinical validation comes from NX-1607, another first-in-class CBLB inhibitor in Phase 1 trials, where 6 of 13 prostate cancer patients achieved ≥50% PSA reductions on optimized twice-daily dosing, including dramatic 90% drops with circulating tumor cell clearance in heavily pretreated cases. Translational data from SITC 2025 further confirmed NX-1607 increased CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in mCRPC, linking systemic immune activation to local microenvironment remodeling.

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