FBLD started early at AstraZeneca (AZ). The first conference Practical Fragments
covered was
held at their erstwhile Alderley Park site; Pete Kenny is an AZ alum, and the
company has put at least four fragment-derived drugs into the clinic. Clearly
their scientists have learned plenty about what works and what doesn’t, and
much of this wisdom is distilled into an excellent recent review in Drug Discovery Today. The authors
include Nathan Fuller, Joe Patel, and Lorena Spadola, the first two of whom are
organizers for the upcoming FBLD 2016 – for which there is still just barely
time to register.
Things weren’t easy in the beginning: of the 63 FBLD targets
screened between 2002 and 2008, a mere 10% led to tractable lead series with interpretable SAR. This improved to 37% of the 19 campaigns conducted between 2009
and 2011, and to 64% of the 11 projects between 2012 and 2014.
What accounts for these improvements? Target selection
certainly played a role. In earlier years many targets were dropped due to
portfolio reasons or lack of validation – nearly half for the period 2009-2011.
Often FBLD was tried in desperation when all else failed, and chemists were not
always available for fragment-to-lead efforts. Today, fragment screening is
considered for all water-soluble targets at AZ, and fully integrated teams are brought
into the process earlier. In 2012 the company established a team of medicinal
chemists dedicated to FBLD – a strategy that has also been used at other companies.
But many of the improvements are technological rather than
organizational. Biophysical screens are displacing high-concentration
biochemical screens, which are particularly prone to false positives and false
negatives. 1D and 2D NMR remain mainstays, but SPR and X-ray crystallography are increasingly
being used in primary screens.
Another major effort was revamping the fragment library,
which currently stands at 15,000 members. Each fragment was experimentally confirmed
to be soluble to at least 0.5 mM in water and 100 mM in DMSO, and the rule of three was used more as a guideline than a rule. The collection was designed to
include a good proportion of “three-dimensional” fragments, as assessed by plane
of best fit (PBF) and principal moment of inertia (PMI). About a quarter of the
fragments are proprietary, and the company also has another 750,000 molecules
within their corporate collection that could be classified as fragments,
greatly facilitating follow-up studies.
A 15,000 member library is atypically large, but in practice
smaller subsets of the library are deployed: 384 for crystallographic
screening, 1152 for NMR screening, and 3072 for SPR screening. Each subset is
optimized for the technique. For example, because the crystallographic subset
is so small, it is designed to sample chemical space as efficiently as possible.
This is done by maximizing the diversity of the fragments and choosing the
smallest fragments possible – less than 17 non-hydrogen atoms, as at Astex. In
contrast, the NMR and SPR subsets contain fragments having up to 21
non-hydrogen atoms, and the SPR set also contains close analogs of some
fragments to improve confidence and provide preliminary SAR. There is some overlap between the sets to facilitate confirmation;
for example, a 768-member “ligandability set” is shared between the NMR and SPR
screening libraries. Finally, AZ has built a customized set of 800 covalent
fragments.
For the most part, fragment hits from each subset tend to
have similar properties as the subset in general, suggesting that each
sub-library is well-suited for its technique. Importantly, this is true even
for three-dimensional fragments, which comprise nearly half of the hits across
19 targets. The researchers also examined how effectively fragments were able
to fill the volume of a given binding pocket for five targets with multiple
crystal structures. They found that shapely fragments were at least as good as –
and sometimes better – at filling the pockets, even with fewer
three-dimensional fragments.
Finally, the article summarizes eight projects in which
fragment hits were progressed. Dissociation constants for the hits
ranged from 50 to 3230 µM; these were advanced to leads with
affinities ranging from 1.5 to 180 nM. In half these cases the ligand efficiency
improved, and in all cases the three dimensionality increased as defined by
PBF. Two of the targets, phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase and mInhA, are
discussed in some detail, complete with chemical and crystal structures.
Hopefully all will be covered more fully in upcoming publications.
There’s lots more in this paper than I can summarize in a blog post,
including multiple figures and tables, so definitely check it out.
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