Blood clotting is something we’re all
familiar with, but the details are devilishly complex; lots of different
proteins play a role. Physiologically this makes sense: the many components
make for a finely tuned system, and you want clotting to happen when it needs
to and then stop. Start too late and you might bleed to death. Start too early
(or don’t stop) and you could develop a fatal clot. Not surprisingly, lots of
things can go wrong, and many of the enzymes involved are drug targets. In a
paper recently published in PLoS One,
Ola Fjellström and colleagues at AstraZeneca describe their efforts on one of these.
Factor XI is involved in the “amplification
phase” of coagulation, and the activated form (FXIa) is a potential
antithrombotic and profibrinolytic target. A high-throughput screen had failed
to find anything useful, so the researchers turned to fragments.
The team started with a computational
screen of 65,000 in-house compounds with molecular weights < 250 Da. They
used Schrödinger’s Glide software and previously determined crystal structures
of the protein. The top 1800 fragments were then tested using ligand-detected
NMR in pools of 6, with each fragment present at 0.1 mM. The researchers were
trying to avoid strongly basic compounds, and they found 13 hits with
calculated pKa< 9. Next, 600 structurally related analogs of the hits were
screened, resulting in 50 hits total. These were then triaged using inhibition
in solution (an SPR technique described here) and taken into crystallography
trials. Two fragments gave high-resolution structures and were prioritized.
Satisfyingly, the two fragments bound as had been predicted by the initial
virtual screen.
Fragment 5 was particularly interesting
because it had never been observed as a hit in the S1 pocket of a serine
protease. Many enzymes in the coagulation cascade share a conserved S1 pocket. This has a predilection for highly positively charged species, so the
neutrality of this fragment was attractive.
Separately, the team found a Bristol-Myers Squibb patent application describing compound 9, which they made and characterized crystallographically. The structure suggested merging a portion of compound 9 with fragment 5, and the resulting compound 13 turned out to be one of the most potent FXIa inhibitors reported.
Separately, the team found a Bristol-Myers Squibb patent application describing compound 9, which they made and characterized crystallographically. The structure suggested merging a portion of compound 9 with fragment 5, and the resulting compound 13 turned out to be one of the most potent FXIa inhibitors reported.
To better understand the system, the
researchers took a deconstruction approach to compound 9, testing the
portion (compound 15) that had been used in the merging. This bit has low
affinity by itself. Yet, when linked to fragment 5, the resulting compound 13
binds roughly 200-fold more tightly than simple additivity would predict.
Similarly dramatic fragment deconstruction results have been reported previously for the related
enzymes factor Xa and thrombin.
Unfortunately compound 13 has fairly low membrane
permeability, high efflux, and high clearance in rats, though preliminary SAR
suggests this is the fault of the Bristol-Myers Squibb piece rather than the
new fragment. At any rate, this is another nice example of using fragment
screening to replace one portion of a known molecule with a new fragment.
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