The protein p97 is important in regulating protein
homeostasis, and thus a potential anti-cancer target. But this is no
low-hanging fruit: the protein has three domains and assembles into a hexamer.
Two domains, D1 and D2, are ATPases. The third (N) domain binds to other
proteins in the cell. All the domains are dynamic and interdependent. Oh, and
crystallography is tough. Previous efforts have identified inhibitors of the D2
domain, but not the others. Not to be put off by difficult challenges, a group of
researchers at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) led by
Michelle Arkin and Mark Kelly have performed fragment screening against the D1
and N domains, and report their adventures in J. Biomol. Screen.
Within UCSF, the Small Molecule Discovery Center (SMDC) has
assembled a fragment library of 2485 commercial compounds from Life, Maybridge,
and Asinex. These have an average molecular weight of 207 Da and 15 heavy
atoms, with ClogP ~1.5. The researchers used both biophysical and virtual
screening.
For the physical screening, the researchers started with surface plasmon resonance (SPR), with each fragment at 0.25 mM. This resulted in 228 primary hits – a fairly
high hit rate. Full dose response studies revealed that 160 of theses fragments showed pathological behavior such as
concentration-dependent aggregation or superstoichiometric binding. A further
30 showed weak or no binding, 13 were irreversible, and 5 bound nonspecifically
to the reference surface, leaving only 20 validated hits which were then
repurchased.
The 228 primary hits were also assessed by STD NMR, each at
0.5 mM when possible (some fragments were not sufficiently soluble). Of these,
84 gave a strong STD signal, and 14 of these were also among the 20
SPR-validated hits.
The 20 repurchased fragments were further tested by both SPR
and STD NMR, and 13 of them reconfirmed by both methods. The paper includes a
table listing all 20 compounds, and one observation that struck me was the fact
that all but one of the hits – which had dissociation constants ranging from
0.14 to 1.7 mM – are larger than the library average. Such results could argue
for including larger fragments in libraries, though this goes against both
molecular complexity theory as well as extensive experience at groups such as
Astex.
Next, the researchers sought to discover information on the
binding sites. Three fragments could be competed by ADP, suggesting that they bind
in the nucleotide-binding site of D1. To narrow things down further, the
researchers turned to 13C-1H-methyl-TROSY NMR, in which
specific side chain methyl groups of Ile, Leu, Met, Val, and Ala were labeled,
and chemical shifts were examined in the presence and absence of fragments. Two
of the proposed nucleotide-binding site fragments showed similar shifts as AMP
or ADP, further supporting a common binding mode (the third was too weak to
test). This was not an easy experiment: the hexamer has a mass of 324 kDa, well
above where most people do protein-detected NMR.
Independent of all the biophysical screens, virtual screens
were conducted using Glide XP, which suggested that the nucleotide binding site
would be the hottest hot spot. Happily, all three fragments that appear to bind
to this site scored highly in the in silico work, with two of these within the
top 100 fragments. However, the binding sites for the other ten confirmed fragments
remain obscure.
This paper serves as a useful guide for how fragment
screening is performed on a tough target in a top-tier research group. Although
difficult, it is not impossible to advance fragments in the absence of structure. While it remains to be seen whether that will be the case for any of
these fragments, the researchers have provided a wealth of data for
those who wish to try.
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