This Astellas preprint reports small-molecule TFAM modulators (lead: compound 2 and optimized analogs) that raise TFAM protein and mtDNA copy number, reduce mtDNA cytosolic escape and blunt cGASβSTINGβIFN signaling in human cell models, with supportive functional readouts in MELAS cybrids, SSc fibroblasts and Tregs β an important, high-novelty chemical-biology advance that nonetheless requires direct biochemical binding data, orthogonal target-engagement proof and in vivo validation before therapeutic claims (full evidence and critique below).
Key primary-source anchors: the preprint (DOI 10.1101/2025.08.13.670134) and prior TFAM stabilizer work (TMP) and CETSA screening precedent are cited inline below.
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Figure: dose-response potency in the ISRE assay (TNFΞ±-stimulated THP-1-Dual); note sub-micromolar IC50 for MTC-0276 (β0.93 Β΅M) indicating tractable potency within lead-like space reported by authors
This manuscript provides important, well-executed cellular evidence that small molecules can increase TFAM protein and mtDNA copy number and thereby reduce mtDNA-triggered innate immune activation. The data are internally consistent and provide strong chemical-biology leads. However, to upgrade this from a promising preclinical chemical-biology report to a mechanistically proven, translationally credible therapeutic claim, the missing biochemical target engagement, proteome-wide specificity profiling and in vivo efficacy/toxicity studies must be completed.
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