RESUMEN
Fragment-based drug discovery has played an important role in medicinal chemistry and pharmaceutical research. Despite numerous demonstrated successes, the limited diversity and overrepresentation of planar, sp2-rich structures in commercial libraries often hamper the full potential of this approach. Hence, the thorough design of screening libraries inevitably determines the probability for meaningful hits and subsequent structural elaboration. Against this background, we present the generation of an exclusive fragment library based on iterative entry nomination by a specifically designed computational workflow: "Fragtory". Following a pharmacophore diversity-driven approach, we used Fragtory in an interdisciplinary academic setting to guide both tailored synthesis efforts and the implementation of in-house compounds to build a curated 288-member library of sp3-enriched fragments. Subsequent NMR screens against a model protein and hit validation by protein crystallography led to the identification of structurally novel ligands that were further characterized by isothermal titration calorimetry, demonstrating the applicability of our experimental approach.
Asunto(s)
Descubrimiento de Drogas , Farmacóforo , Proteínas , Unión Proteica , Ligandos , Diseño de FármacosRESUMEN
Ligand-based virtual screening is a widespread method in modern drug design. It allows for a rapid screening of large compound databases in order to identify similar structures. Here we report an open-source command line tool which includes a substructure-, fingerprint- and shape-based virtual screening. Most of the implemented features fully rely on the RDKit cheminformatics framework. VSFlow accepts a wide range of input file formats and is highly customizable. Additionally, a quick visualization of the screening results as pdf and/or pymol file is supported.
RESUMEN
Mutations within Ras proteins represent major drivers in human cancer. In this study, we report the structure-based design, synthesis, as well as biochemical and cellular evaluation of nucleotide-based covalent inhibitors for KRasG13C, an important oncogenic mutant of Ras that has not been successfully addressed in the past. Mass spectrometry experiments and kinetic studies reveal promising molecular properties of these covalent inhibitors, and X-ray crystallographic analysis has yielded the first reported crystal structures of KRasG13C covalently locked with these GDP analogues. Importantly, KRasG13C covalently modified with these inhibitors can no longer undergo SOS-catalysed nucleotide exchange. As a final proof-of-concept, we show that in contrast to KRasG13C, the covalently locked protein is unable to induce oncogenic signalling in cells, further highlighting the possibility of using nucleotide-based inhibitors with covalent warheads in KRasG13C-driven cancer.