Screening fragments
crystallographically is becoming more common, especially as the
process becomes increasingly automated. Not only does crystallography reveal detailed
molecular contacts, it is unmatched in sensitivity. At the FBLD 2018 meeting last
year we highlighted work out of Astex taking this approach to extremes,
screening very small fragments at very high concentrations. Harren Jhoti and
colleagues have now published details (open access) in Drug Discovery Today.
The researchers assembled a
library of 81 diminutive fragments, or “MiniFrags”, each with just 5 to 7
non-hydrogen atoms. Indeed, the fragments adhere more closely to the “rule of 1” than the “rule of 3.” Because the fragments are so small, they are likely to
have especially low affinities: a 5 atom fragment with an impressive
ligand efficiency of 0.5 kcal mol-1 per heavy atom would have a
risibly weak dissociation constant of 14 mM. In order to detect such weak binders,
the researchers screen at 1 M fragment concentrations,
almost twice the molarity of sugar in soda! Achieving these concentrations is done by dissolving
fragments directly in the crystallographic soaking solution and adjusting the pH
when necessary. Although this might mean preparing custom fragment stocks for each
protein, it avoids organic solvents such as DMSO, which can both damage
crystals and compete for ligand binding sites.
As proof of concept, the
researchers chose five internal targets they had previously screened
crystallographically under more conventional conditions (50-100 mM of larger
fragments). All targets diffracted to high resolution, at least 2 Å, and
represented a range of protein classes from kinases to protein-protein
interactions. The hit rates were enormous, from just under 40% to 60%, compared
to an average of 12% using standard conditions.
Astex has previously described how
crystallography often identifies secondary binding sites away from the active site, and this turned out to be the case with MiniFrags: an average of 10
ligand binding sites per protein. In some cases protein conformational changes occurred, which is surprising given the small size and (presumably)
weak affinities of the MiniFrags.
All this is fascinating from a
molecular recognition standpoint, but the question is whether it is useful for
drug discovery. The researchers go into some detail around the kinase ERK2,
which we previously wrote about here. MiniFrags identified 11 ligand-binding
sites, several of which consist of subsites within the active site. Some of
the MiniFrags show features previously seen in larger molecules, such as an
aromatic ring or a positively charged group, but the MiniFrags also identified
new pockets where ligands had not previously been observed. The researchers
argue that these “warm spots” could be targeted during lead optimization.
One laudable feature of the paper
is that the chemical structures of all library members are provided in the
supplementary material. Although it would be easy to recreate by purchasing
compounds individually, hopefully one or more library vendors will start
selling the set. If MiniFrag screening is standardized across multiple labs,
the resulting experimental data could provide useful inputs for further
improving computational approaches, as well as providing more information for lead discovery.
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