Last week some 875 people
attended the CHI Drug Discovery Chemistry (DDC) meeting in San Diego. I can’t
do justice to the 40 or so presentations I attended over four days but can highlight
some of the main themes.
Reversible fragments
Membrane targets such as G protein-coupled
receptors (GPCRs) pose a challenge for biophysical methods, but three talks presented
progress. Matthew Eddy (University of Florida Gainesville) described
high-resolution magic angle spinning (HRMAS) NMR, which entails spinning isolated
cellular membranes containing GPCRs at high speed (4 kHz!), which miraculously yields
sharp NMR signals for bound ligands. Matthew demonstrated applications with the
human adenosine A2A receptor and weak (mM) ligands. He noted that the
technique can work with native, poorly expressed proteins, though data collection
times can be upwards of 30 minutes.
Kris Borzilleri described using 19F
NMR to find ligands against an orphan GPCR at Pfizer. The 2287 fragments
screened yielded 87 hits, of which 38 confirmed by SPR. SAR studies eventually
yielded low micromolar ligands, but these were difficult to advance in the
absence of structure (see here for a more successful example from Merck).
Vanessa Porkolab (Eurofins Cerep)
described using the Nanotemper Spectral Shift technology to screen 826 fragments against
the adenosine A2A receptor at 300 µM, with a 9.2% hit rate. Many of
these ligands stabilized the GPCR in a thermal shift assay and seven were even active
(as antagonists) in a cellular assay.
Turning to soluble proteins,
Paola Di Lello presented a case study from Genentech and Vernalis applying
ligand-observed NMR to the protein phosphatase PTPN22. Subsequent protein-observed
NMR revealed that most of the 16 validated hits bound to two pockets some
distance from the active site. The fragments were optimized to mid-micromolar affinity
but showed no functional activity.
And Charlotte Hodson presented
the eIF4E story from Astex. As we discussed last year, this yielded a low
nanomolar ligand that did not have the desired cellular effects. Charlotte noted
that subsequent genetic experiments were consistent with the limited efficacy. Still, the
target was sufficiently interesting that a chemical probe would have been
pursued even knowing it would be high-risk.
Covalent ligands
Covalent approaches made appearances
throughout the conference. Keriann Backus (UCLA) described chemoproteomic
approaches to find cysteine-targeting ligands; she noted that gain of cysteine
residues (such as G12C in KRAS) are the most common missense variants in cancer.
Keriann also warned how covalent compounds can cause potentially misleading
effects in cells, as she described in Nat. Chem. Biol. last year.
In 2021 we wrote about the
SpotXplorer fragment library from György Keserű (Hungarian Research Centre for
Natural Sciences). György has now prepared a PhotoXplorer library, which uses
diazirine tags for photochemical screening, which we described here. The new
library has produced high hit rates across a variety of targets. György also
described a new sulfozone-based photoprobe that is easier to prepare than diazirines.
Kelly Craft recounted a DNA-encoded
library (DEL) screen at AbbVie against the target BCL2A1, also known as BFL1.
This produced an aldehyde-containing low micromolar binder that formed an imine
with buried lysine 102. Uncomfortable progressing an aldehyde, the researchers sought
to covalently engage cysteine 55, the same cysteine targeted by AstraZeneca, as
we wrote about here. The progression included at least one dual-warhead
molecule which was crystallographically confirmed to bind both the lysine and
cysteine. The effort ultimately yielded cysteine-selective leads.
Earlier this year I described the dDRTC method we developed at Frontier Medicines for determining kinact/KI,
and Svetlana Kholodar presented a nice overview of its scope and utility. My
colleague Johannes Hermann spoke in more detail about our covalent technologies,
particularly those using AI.
Chemical space and the
exploration thereof
Brian Shoichet (UCSF) gave an
entertaining and wide-ranging account of “directed and random walks in chemical
space.” Brian has consistently been on the bleeding edge of high-throughput in
silico screens, from 67,000 compounds in 2009 to 138 million molecules in
2019 to 4 billion molecules today. When docking artifacts are avoided (as we
discussed here), bigger libraries consistently produce more potent hits for more
targets – an observation strikingly consistent with Alex Shaginian’s in 2023 as
HitGen expanded their DEL libraries from billions to more than a trillion
molecules. Brian is developing methods to computationally screen the >4 trillion make-on-demand molecules now available from companies such as Enamine.
Direct-to-biology (DTB) approaches,
which rely on microscale chemical reactions screened without purification, have
become increasingly popular methods for exploring chemical space. Jack Sadowsky
correctly stated that Carmot was the first company formed around this approach;
we previously wrote about the role Chemotype Evolution played in the discovery
of sotorasib. Jack described how Kimia, which spun out of Carmot, has continued
to advance the technology, applying it to find inhibitors selective for single
members of closely related kinase families.
Allan Jordan described how Sygnature
Discovery is applying DTB in a variety of assays including microsome stability
and crystallography. (We wrote about crude reaction screening by crystallography
earlier this year.) Expanding beyond DTB, Allan called their platform
direct-to-discovery, and discussed how it led to a preclinical candidate with STORM
Therapeutics in just 18 months.
WuXi Apptec is also using DTB.
Peichuan Zhang described starting with ligands derived from fragment and DEL
screens against the E3 ligase GID4 to make PROTACs to degrade BRD4; DTB was used
to explore a wide range of different linkers. And Daniel Blair (St. Jude)
described using DTB and affinity selection-mass spectrometry (AS-MS) to find
new molecular glues for the oncology target LCK.
Computers, DEL, and DTB are not
the only way to explore chemical space. Last year we covered Tom Kodadek’s bead-based
screening approach at University of Florida Scripps, and Tom presented two talks on the topic, one using
macrocycles to find binders to difficult targets such as PTP1B and one using
small molecules to find molecular glues.
Speaking of PROTACs and glues,
plenary keynote speaker Alessio Ciulli (University of Dundee) discussed the “evolution and future of
targeted protein degradation.” Alessio noted that there are >25 PROTAC
degraders and >10 glues in the clinic, though these collectively target only
a small number of E3 ligands, so there is plenty of opportunity for the area to
expand.
For many of us in industry, drugs
represent the most privileged points in chemical space, and these often look
quite different than we assume, as Dean Brown (Jnana) noted in his recent analysis
of 104 oral small molecule drugs approved by the FDA from 2020 to 2024 (which
we mentioned here). Some drugs contain eye-raising moieties such as acetylenes,
styrenes, N-O bonds, and nitro groups. Indeed, it is worth remembering that venetoclax,
arguably the most successful fragment-derived drug, sports a nitro group.
But before getting too complacent,
Jonathan Baell (Manas) warned about frequent hitters in libraries of FDA-approved
drugs. He notes in Eur. J. Med. Chem. earlier this year that many commercial
libraries are actually enriched for molecules that cause spurious biological
activity. Jonathan calls on library vendors to remove particularly egregious
compounds, though I’d settle for world peace.
I’ll close on that pleasant
thought, but please feel free to comment. I hope to see you in San Diego next
year April 19-22 for the twenty-second iteration of DDC.
1 comment:
Thank you for your capturing all the key highlights Dan. I find these very helpful as I never get to attend most of these talks. It good to have this early recap before the recordings become available.
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