Protein phosphatases, which remove
phosphate groups from proteins, fall into the category of low-hanging but
firmly attached fruit: many make great targets, but getting lead-like
inhibitors is tough. Indeed, the enzymes seem to be particularly susceptible to
PAINS (see for example here and here). A major challenge is the
phosphate-binding site, which has a predilection for highly negatively charged
(and non-druglike) moieties. In a paper just published in ACS Chem. Biol., Tomasz Cierpicki and his group at the University
of Michigan neatly sidestep this issue.
The researchers were interested in the
dual-specificity protein phosphatase CDC25B, which is important in cell cycle
regulation and thus a potential anti-cancer target. They started with a 1H–15N
HSC NMR screen of 1500 fragments in pools of 20, with each fragment present at
0.25 mM. This yielded a single hit: 2-fluoro-4-hydroxybenzonitrile.
Because the researchers were using
protein-observed NMR and had previously assigned the backbone resonances, they
were able to use chemical shift perturbations to identify the binding site.
Surprisingly, this turned out to be not the active site at all, but rather a
region about 15 Å away. They were able to confirm this site using X-ray
crystallography, which further revealed that the fragment binds in a small
pocket near where the substrate protein CDK2 binds.
The researchers noticed a nearby sulfate
ion (from the crystallization buffer) and, after first doing a brief SAR by
catalog survey, they tried to link this to their hit. Although this certainly
didn’t improve physicochemical properties, it did result in tighter binding,
and crystallography confirmed that the new molecule bound as designed. This
molecule also inhibited the phosphatase, albeit modestly (IC50 1-2
mM). The result suggests that blocking this protein-protein interaction is
effective at blocking activity.
Hi: I wanted to let you know about a new volume in the Methods in Molecular Biology Series on Fragments:
ReplyDeleteFragment-Based Methods in Drug Discovery
Series: Methods in Molecular Biology, Vol. 1289
Klon, Anthony E. (Ed.) coming 2015!
see http://www.springer.com/biomed/pharmacology+%26+toxicology/book/978-1-4939-2485-1 for complete content and details