The researchers had previously identified reversible
covalent inhibitors containing boronic acids, some of which were quite potent.
However, they had reached an affinity plateau, and the compounds had only
modest activity against bacteria in vitro. By examining the crystal structures
of some of these molecules bound to AmpC, and superimposing these on the
crystal structures of some of the fragments bound to the protein, they were
able to come up with new ideas. For example, adding the tetrazole of fragment
F3 to their previously reported compound 9 led to a low nanomolar inhibitor,
and adding a small hydrophobic substituent improved the potency to an impressive
50 picomolar. Similar strategies worked with other fragment-inhibitor
combinations.
AmpC beta lactamase degrades cephalosporin antibiotics, and
the researchers demonstrated that many of their new molecules were effective at
restoring sensitivity to otherwise resistant bacterial strains in vitro and, in
the one case tested, in a mouse survival model.
This paper also addresses Teddy’s recent question, what is
FBDD? Although the fragments described in 2009 were not themselves advanced,
the information they provided was essential to moving the project forward. As
the researchers note:
Whereas fragments
are widely used to nucleate early discovery, this study suggests that they also
may be used to guide late-stage optimiziation into chemotypes and geometries
that would be hard to systematically sample by other methods.
This is all the more impressive given the relatively low
ligand efficiency of the initial fragments. So though purists may argue whether
this work is technically FBDD, it is certainly a nice example of
fragment-assisted drug discovery, in this case merging parts of fragments with
other molecules.
No comments:
Post a Comment