Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 16th Annual

Strategies for Targeting Kinases

Novel Chemistries and Techniques for Studying, Modulating, and Degrading Kinases

September 22, 2025 ALL TIMES EDT

Selectively targeting kinases has always been a challenge, as they possess highly-conserved substrate binding sites and intersect so many different pathways in a cell. However, with developments in technology and emergence of new drug modalities, there has been renewed interest in pursuing kinases involved in cancer, inflammation, autoimmune, neurodegeneration, and other complex disorders. Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s symposium on Strategies for Targeting Kinases highlights emerging assays and molecules that are being developed to selectively modify kinases for targeted therapy.

Monday, September 22

8:00 amPre-Conference Symposium Registration Open and Morning Coffee

8:50 amWelcome Remarks

UNDERSTANDING STRUCTURE-FUNCTION RELATIONSHIPS

8:55 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Laurent Gomez, PhD, Senior Vice President & Head of Discovery, Iambic Therapeutics Inc.

9:00 am

Enhanced Protein-Ligand Co-Folding for Precise Kinase-SAR Modeling

Rayees Rahman, PhD, Co-Founder & CEO, Harmonic Discovery

Modeling kinase-ligand structure-activity relationships remains challenging due to kinase conformational flexibility and limitations of computational methods like docking. Here, we introduce Terra, a novel protein-ligand co-folding model fine-tuned on kinase conformations and ligand SAR data. Terra achieves correlation coefficients matching or exceeding FEP methods for known and novel kinase targets, with a 10X lower computational cost. We apply Terra to identify novel allosteric JAK2 inhibitors targeting the V617F mutation. 

9:30 am

 Applying Quantum Methods to Address Selectivity Challenges in Phosphatases and Beyond

Vid Stojevic, PhD, CoFounder & CEO, Kuano Ltd.

Kinases and Phosphatases present similar challenges due to the conservation and polarity of their active sites, which limits the selectivity and drug-likeness of orthosteric inhibitors. Kuano applies QM/MM to simulate transition states of phosphatases in the PTPN family, guiding the design of novel small molecule inhibitors with enhanced specificity, binding complementarity, and potential for covalency. These ‘quantum pharmacophores’ along with AI-assisted design workflows offer transferable solutions to kinase inhibitor design.

10:00 am

Leveraging AI/ML to Engineer Next-Generation HER2 Inhibitors with Enhanced Selectivity and Brain Penetrance

Laurent Gomez, PhD, Senior Vice President & Head of Discovery, Iambic Therapeutics Inc.

Using our ML-driven platform, we engineered a next-generation HER2 inhibitor with exceptional selectivity, broad mutant coverage, brain penetrance, which is currently being evaluated in a Phase 1/1b clinical trial. This new class of compounds bind HER2 in a type II DFG-out conformation, representing the first reported type II HER2 tyrosine kinase inhibitors. This program was enabled by our AI technologies, including PropANE (a precursor to our Enchant platform) and NeuralPLexer. Combined with high-throughput parallel synthesis and screening, these tools accelerated the identification and optimization of highly selective candidates with broad therapeutic potential in HER2-driven cancers.

10:30 am Bridging Biochemistry and Biology: Continuous Kinase Activity Assays with Complex Samples

Erik Schaefer, CSO, AssayQuant Technologies Inc

Kinase inhibitors are central to modern therapeutics, yet early discovery often relies on assays with limited mechanistic or physiological insight—creating a disconnect between biochemical results and biological complexity. AssayQuant® has developed continuous fluorescence-based assays that directly quantify kinase activity in crude lysates and tissue homogenates. By delivering real-time insights under more physiological conditions, these assays help identify more effective drugs earlier to improve translational success with patients.

11:00 amEnjoy Lunch on Your Own

12:25 pm

Chairperson's Remarks

Ken Hsu, PhD, Stephen F. and Fay Evans Martin Endowed Associate Professor, Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at Austin

12:30 pm

Development of Brain Penetrant Pantothenate Kinase Activators

Rajendra P Tangallapally, PhD, Senior Scientist, Chemical Biology & Therapeutics, St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital

Pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration (PKAN) is a rare, autosomal recessive disorder caused by inactivating mutations in the human PANK2 gene which encodes the PANK2 protein. In humans, four isoforms of Pantothenate kinase (PANK1α, 1β, 2, and 3) phosphorylate pantothenate (vitamin B5) is the first and rate-limiting step of Coenzyme A (CoA) biosynthesis. To address CoA deficiency in PKAN patients, we developed first in class small molecule PANK1 and 3 activators using lipophilic efficiency and structure guided design. This approach led to the generation of BBP-671, which advanced into clinical trials.

1:00 pm

Molecular Mechanism of Paradoxical Activation of BRAF by Inhibitors

Nicholas Levinson, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Pharmacology, University of Minnesota Twin Cities

Raf inhibitors trigger paradoxical activation of BRAF at sub-saturating concentrations. Using biophysical techniques tracking BRAF conformation and oligomerization we show that paradoxical activation occurs because the first inhibitor molecule to bind to RAF dimers is much more strongly coupled to dimerization than the second inhibitor molecule. NMR experiments show this arises from inherent asymmetry of the BRAF dimer itself. Our results provide new insight into the mechanisms underlying paradoxical activation.

1:30 pm

Modulation of Cancer Specific Interactomes via Chemical Switches and Molecular Glues

Arvin Dar, PhD, Professor, Chemical Biology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Chemically induced proximity of bimolecular complexes is a powerful modality to rewire signal transduction networks. Most extensively studied in the context of protein degradation, the full scope and potential of chemically induced proximity for novel targets and pharmacological mechanisms has yet to be realized. I will discuss structure-based strategies to advance chemically induced proximity in several complementary areas, including as an approach to overcome drug resistance and as a mechanism to achieve ultra-selective modulators of kinase targets.

2:00 pmIn-Person Brainstorming Session

This informal session will be led by the speakers, allowing participants to ask questions and exchange ideas around topics related to the symposium. To get the most out of this session, please come prepared to share your ideas and participate in collective problem solving.

2:45 pmNetworking Refreshment Break

Join your colleagues for a cup of coffee or refreshments and make new connections​

3:15 pm

COOKIE-Pro: Covalent Inhibitor Binding Kinetics Profiling on the Proteome Scale

Jin Wang, PhD, Director, Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Baylor College of Medicine

We developed COOKIE-Pro, a new method to quantify the binding kinetics of covalent inhibitors across the entire proteome. Using mass spectrometry, it determines kinetic values (kinact?/KI?) for both on- and off-target proteins. We validated COOKIE-Pro with BTK inhibitors, reproducing known parameters and identifying novel off-targets. This powerful tool helps optimize the potency and selectivity of covalent drugs, aiding preclinical development by providing a comprehensive view of inhibitor binding.

3:45 pm

Going beyond Cysteine for Kinase Covalent Ligand Discovery

Ken Hsu, PhD, Stephen F. and Fay Evans Martin Endowed Associate Professor, Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at Austin

I will describe sulfonyl-triazoles as an enabling electrophile for developing covalent binders to tyrosine and lysine residues on proteins through sulfur-triazole exchange (SuTEx) chemistry. SuTEx chemistry is highly tunable with respect to protein reactivity and specificity, which can facilitate optimization of potent and selective binders to orthosteric and allosteric sites on kinases. I will conclude my talk by describing efforts to apply SuTEx ligands for modulating kinase function in cells.

4:15 pmClose of Symposium

5:00 pmDinner Short Courses*

*All Access Package or separate registration required. See Short Courses page for details.

7:30 pmClose of Day





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