DC60500 |
NVS-STG2
|
NVS-STG2 is a molecular glue that targets STING and activates STING-mediated immune signaling. NVS-STG2 induces higher-order oligomerization of human STING by binding to pockets between adjacent STING dimer transmembrane domains, effectively acting as a molecular glue. NVS-STGI enhances the activity of cGAMP by inducing the formation of more abundant and larger oligomers. NVS-STG2 produces antitumor activity in animal models. |
DC60034 |
STING inhibitor-1
|
STING inhbiitor, which inhibited the activation of the STING signal pathway and to prevent or treat a STING-mediated disease. |
DC60033 |
STING INHIBITOR-2
|
STING inhbiitor, which inhibited the activation of the STING signal pathway and to prevent or treat a STING-mediated disease. |
DC39220 |
STING agonist compound 17
|
STING agonist compound 17 is a selective stimulator of interferon genes (STING) receptor agonist. |
DC39210 |
MSA-2 analogue
|
MSA-2 analogue is an orally available human STING agonist. |
DC39031 |
MSA-2
|
MSA-2 is an orally available human STING agonist.MSA-2 is bound to STING as a noncovalent dimer. Extensive experimental analysis indicates that MSA-2 predimerization is required for binding. Acidic tumor microenvironments favor permeable, uncharged MSA-2. |
DC39030 |
SR-717
|
SR-717 is a non-nucleotide, small-molecule STING agonist and functions as a direct cyclic guanosine monophosphate-adenosine monophosphate (cGAMP) mimetic that induces the same "closed" conformation of STING.SR-717 functions as a direct cyclic guanosine mo |
DC72041 |
BSP16
|
BSP16 is a potent, orally active stimulator of interferon genes (STING) agonist. BSP16 can selectively stimulate the STING pathway. BSP16 can be used for the research of cancer. |
DC50039 |
3'3'-cGAMP (sodium salt)
|
3’3’-cGAMP Fluorinated (c-[2'FdGMP]-[2'FdAMP]) is a synthetic analog of cyclic guanosine monophosphate- adenosine monophosphate (cyclic GMP-AMP, cGAMP) with a fluorine atom at 2’ position of the nucleosides. 3’3’-cGAMP is a cyclic di-nucleotide produced by bacteria. It is also referred to as "canonical" cGAMP due the presence of the classical 3’-5’ phosphodiester linkages between the guanosine and the adenosine. It has been reported that cGAMP binds STING (stimulator of IFN genes) and subsequently induces TBK1-IRF3-dependent production of IFN-β [1].
The incorporation of fluorine into biologically active molecules is commonly used in medicinal chemistry to improve their metabolic stability or to modulate physicochemical properties such as lipophilicity [2, 3]. Moreover, the introduction of a fluorine atom can change the biological activities of a molecule. Interestingly, when used at low concentrations in various cellular assays, 3’3’-cGAMP Fluorinated induces higher levels of type I IFNs than does cGAMP.
STING ligands such as cGAMP induce type I IFNs and activate interferon stimulated genes (ISG) through IRFs. To facilitate their study, InvivoGen has developed stable reporter cells in two well established immune cell models: THP-1 human monocytes and RAW 264.7 murine macrophages. These cells express a reporter gene (SEAP or Lucia luciferase), under control of an IRF-inducible promoter. |
DC48024 |
cGAMP diammonium
|
cGAMP (Cyclic GMP-AMPP) diammonium functions as an endogenous second messenger in metazoans and triggers interferon production in response to cytosolic DNA. cGAMP diammonium activates stimulator of interferon genes (STING), which activates a signaling cascade leading to the production of type I interferons and other immune mediators. |