In order to thrive, cancer cells
need to evade the immune system. Preventing them from doing so is the goal of
cancer immunotherapy. Although it has not entirely lived up to its initial
hopes, this promising approach has generated multiple new targets, such as T-cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain-containing molecule 3 (TIM-3), whose
upregulation correlates with tumor progression. Several antibodies targeting
this protein are working their way through the clinic, but small molecules may
have advantages in terms of oral dosing and improved tumor penetration. The
discovery of one small molecule binder is reported in a new J. Med. Chem. paper by Stephen
Fesik and colleagues at Vanderbilt University.
As is customary for this group,
the project began with a two-dimensional (1H/15N HMQC)
NMR screen of 13,824 fragments, each at 0.8 mM in pools of 12. This yielded 101
hits, a respectable 0.7% hit rate, and higher than might be expected for this
immunoglobulin-like protein. The hits belonged to 11 chemotypes, and 18 had
dissociation constants better than 1 mM and ligand efficiencies (LE) better
than 0.25 kcal mol-1 per heavy atom. All
of the fragments caused similar resonance perturbations, suggesting a common
binding pocket, though as specific backbone resonance assignments were not known
the exact location was unclear. Compound 1 was pursued due to its (relatively) high
affinity, LE, and chemical tractability.
Substitutions off two vectors
of the molecule improved affinity, and combining these substituents led to
compound 22. This molecule bound sufficiently tightly that NMR could no longer
be used to measure the dissociation constant. At this point the researchers
were able to solve a crystal structure of the compound bound to TIM-3,
revealing that it binds to a protein loop with the tricyclic core sandwiched
between two tryptophan residues. The structure also revealed a portion of the
molecule that extended toward solvent, and this insight was used to construct a
fluorescent probe for use in a fluorescence polarization anisotropy (FPA) competition
assay to accurately measure binding of more potent molecules.
With the probe results and
crystal structure in hand, the researchers continued to optimize the molecule
by growing towards a couple arginine and aspartic acid residues. This led to
compound 34, which again started bottoming out the FPA assay and necessitated
constructing yet another fluorescent probe. Further optimization using
structure-based design ultimately led to compound 38, the most potent molecule
in the series. NMR experiments revealed that compound 38 causes a
rigidification of the TIM-3 loop where it binds.
And that’s where things stand.
Unfortunately no data are presented as to whether compound 38 blocks binding of
TIM-3 to its biological partners. The binding site is actually somewhat distant
from where natural ligands bind, suggesting that the compounds would likely
need to act allosterically. Moreover, the researchers note that many of the
compounds are not particularly soluble. Still, whether the compounds move
forward or not, this is a nice example of finding fragments that bind to a
novel target and using diverse insights to improve them by several
orders of magnitude.
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