Last month we highlighted a study
that asked how often the binding mode of a fragment changed during optimization. A
new paper in J. Med. Chem., by Swen
Hoelder and collaborators at Institute of Cancer Research, University of
Oxford, and Universitat de Barcelona provides an interesting case study.
The researchers were interested
in the kinase ALK2, which is implicated in an aggressive and universally fatal
childhood cancer called diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma. They started by
screening a library of fragments designed to target kinases, which yielded
compound 1. This compound actually contains two moieties that are known kinase
hinge binders, a quinazolinone and a pyrazole. Unfortunately the researchers
could not obtain a crystal structure of the fragment bound to ALK2, but SAR
suggested that the pyrazole was not essential, and indeed replacing this with a
quinoline led to compound 7, with sub-micromolar activity.
Next the researchers introduced
methyl groups at various positions around the quinazolinone and found that
these neither significantly improved nor decreased binding. Modeling based on similar
reported molecules led them to grow the molecule towards solvent, ultimately
leading to the mid-nanomolar compound 16 (blue in figure below), which they characterized
crystallographically bound to ALK2. The molecule bound as expected, with the unsubstituted
nitrogen of the quinazolinone forming a hydrogen bond to the hinge region of
the kinase.
So far so good, but the researchers
were still curious about some of their earlier SAR. In particular, the methyl
groups added to some of the molecules should have been incompatible with the
observed binding mode of compound 16, suggesting an alternative binding mode
for these molecules. This insight proved correct, and in fact adding two methyl
groups to compound 7 led to compound 21, which is more potent than compound 7
and binds such that the amide of the quinazolinone core forms hydrogen bonds
with the hinge region, as confirmed by crystallography (green in figure).
Compounds 16 and 21 have similar
affinities yet different binding modes, so what about selectivity? Testing them
in a panel of ~110 kinases revealed both to be quite selective for ALK family
kinases, though they had different off-targets. The selectivity of compound 21
is particularly impressive given its small size – it teeters on the edge of
being rule of three compliant. A related molecule also showed activity in a
cell-based assay.
An interesting unanswered
question is the binding mode of the initial fragment. Perhaps it binds in
multiple orientations, which could explain why crystallography was
unsuccessful. Regardless, this is a nice study that illustrates how close
attention to confusing SAR can lead to attractive new series.
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