Molecules that dissociate slowly from their target proteins
are potentially useful because they can have a long-lasting effect even if they
are rapidly cleared from circulation. However, it is next to impossible to
predict whether a molecule will dissociate slowly or not. Moreover, the
correlation with binding affinity is poor: weak binders generally don’t stay
bound to their target for long, but even tight binders often rapidly
dissociate. In the early stages of lead discovery most folk are focused on affinity,
and it is usually only much later that kinetics enters in. In a new paper in J. Med. Chem., James Murray,
Paul Brough, and colleagues at Vernalis introduce a technique that moves
kinetics to the front of the line.
The technique, off-rate screening (ORS), relies on surface
plasmon resonance (SPR), which is already commonly used to study binding
kinetics. The trick here is using SPR to screen products in unpurified reaction
mixtures. An initial fragment with known affinity is modified, and products
screened for slower dissociation. Of course, the concentration of desired
compound is likely to vary from mixture to mixture, but the great thing about
looking at compound dissociation is that it is a zero order reaction: it does
not depend on concentration. The researchers use mathematical simulations to
show that even if the yield is only 5%, a product with a 10-fold slower
dissociation rate constant could still be detected. Since off-rates can vary by
orders of magnitude, this is not such a high bar.
Of course, simulations are one thing, but how does the
technique actually work in practice? The researchers show examples on two
targets, one using some of the early compounds for their HSP90 program, the
other some of their PIN1 inhibitors. For PIN1, the researchers resynthesized
some of the molecules in plastic tubes, which caused leaching of plastic into
the reaction mixtures. Nonetheless, for both proteins the dissociation rate
constants measured for unpurified reactions were very close to purified
molecules, generally differing by less than 30%.
The researchers also tried subjecting compounds to eleven
reaction conditions typically used in medicinal chemistry, evaporating the
solvent, and testing the products; the idea was to see if the reagents or other
components in the reaction mixture would interfere with the assay. Happily in
all cases the dissociation rate constants differed by less than 20%, again
pointing to the robustness of ORS.
Of course, as with any technique, there are limitations. Since
the screening compounds are not purified from their starting materials, the desired
products must dissociate sufficiently slowly from the protein to be
distinguishable from other components in the reaction mixture; dissociation
rate constants greater than about 1.2 s-1 appear to be challenging.
Also, if the starting material itself has a slow dissociation rate from the
protein, it may be difficult to differentiate this from a low yield of slowly
dissociating product. The researchers note that both cases could be addressed
by changing the temperature, either lowering it to slow the dissociation rate
constant or raising it to increase it.
All in all this is a nice approach, and it will be interesting to see how widely it catches on.
All in all this is a nice approach, and it will be interesting to see how widely it catches on.
1 comment:
Very interesting post! One minor correction point: dissociation of a complex is a first order process with a first order rate constant. While the rate constant lacks the familiar inverse concentration unit of a binding rate constant, the dissociation rate constant is multiplied by the (remaining) concentration of complex to yield the observed instantaneous dissociation rate at any instant in time. A zero order process just has an observed rate that doesn't depend on the amount of material.
Post a Comment