As we’ve noted (repeatedly), epigenetics is
big. However, much of the focus has been on bromodomains, which recognize
acetylated lysine residues. In a paper published earlier this year in ACS Chem. Biol., Lindsey James, Stephen
Frye and collaborators at the University of North Carolina, the University of
Texas, the Mayo Clinic, and the University of Toronto describe their efforts on
a protein that recognizes methylated lysine residues (a Kme reader).
The protein 53BP1 is involved in DNA repair
and could have anticancer potential. It recognizes a dimethylated lysine
sidechain within a histone protein, so the researchers screened a set of
molecules containing amines to mimic this moiety. They used an AlphaScreen
assay, with each compound at 100 µM. This does not appear to have been a
library of fragments (and unfortunately the number of compounds screened was
not stated), but the most notable hit was the fragment-like UNC2170.
Although the affinity was modest, it was quite selective for 53BP1, showing no activity up to 500 µM against 9 other Kme readers. Since AlphaScreen assays can be prone to false positives (the original PAINS compounds were identified in this assay), the researchers tested their compound using ITC, which gave a dissociation constant of 22 µM, in good agreement with the AlphaScreen assay, though with unusual stoichiometry (more on that later).
Thus encouraged, the researchers set off to
optimize their hit. Initially they tried modifications around the amine, but even
changes as subtle as adding or removing a methyl group killed activity.
Attempts to rigidify the propyl linker were also unsuccessful, and shortening
it or lengthening it failed too. Replacing the amide with a sulfonamide or
amine abolished activity. Most substitutions around the phenyl ring also gave
dead compounds, though the bromine atom could be replaced with similarly
hydrophobic moieties such as iodine, isopropyl, or trifluoromethyl. Many other
analogs were made too, all to no avail. Though the text is measured, the
frustration is palpable.
Ultimately the researchers were able to
solve the crystal structure of the compound bound to 53BP1, which produced a
surprise: one molecule of UNC2170 binds to two molecules of protein, making
interactions with each. This explains the stoichiometry seen in the ITC data. It also explains the
intolerance to substitutions, as “the ligand is encircled by both proteins,”
with no room for modifications.
Happily, UNC2170 is highly cell permeable
and non-toxic, and does show some modest activity in cell-based assays.
Hopefully the researchers will ultimately find more potent compounds, though
this may require a different approach. Indeed, another Kme reader also proved
to be quite challenging, but was amenable to fragments. It would be fun to see
whether an explicit fragment screen produces more tractable starting points
against 53BP1.
One thing they should do is to replace m-Br-benzamide with amide of 5-Br-thiophene-2-carboxylic acid. It is a cheap building block, nearly perfectly isosteric with m-bromobenzamide, but the CO...S attractive electrostatic interaction will fix the thiophene ring orientation with Br pointing in the desired direction, so there should be significant entropic gain. Also, the slightly increased electron density of thiophene ring should improve the ring interaction with methionine NH proton in the active site
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