The nuclear receptor
transcription factor RORγt2 is involved in the differentiation of Th17 cells,
and is thus a target for inflammatory diseases. The protein contains a large,
hydrophobic ligand binding site, and as a result most known inverse agonists have
less than ideal physicochemical properties. In a paper recently published in J. Med. Chem., Samuel Hintermann and
colleagues at Novartis have taken a fragment-based approach.
The researchers screened a
library of 1408 fragments using a “differential static light scattering (DSLS)”
assay, which is a type of thermal shift assay that measures denaturation and
aggregation of the protein. A few dozen molecules that stabilized RORγt2 were
tested in dose-response curves prior to crystallization trials, ultimately
yielding 13 structures. Compound 1 was particularly interesting because it
binds in the center of the cavity, providing growth vectors in two directions.
It also makes a couple hydrogen bonds with the protein, as opposed to purely hydrophobic interactions.
Growing from the ethoxy position
quickly led to improvements in affinity. To avoid the possibility of toxic
iminoquinone metabolites, the researchers replaced the central phenyl ring with
a pyridine, resulting in the low micromolar inverse agonist compound 8.
To further improve affinity, the
researchers merged an element from a previously reported GlaxoSmithKline molecule (compound 2) onto compound 8, resulting in the potent compound 9, which was
characterized in a battery of assays.
The crystal structure of compound
9 bound to the protein revealed that the core fragment moiety binds in the same manner as the original compound 1, though the added benzyl ether binds in a
subpocket that had not previously been observed to bind ligands.
Kinetic studies using a reporter displacement assay revealed that compound 9 has both a slow on-rate as well as
a slow off-rate, consistent with the fact that it is fully enclosed by the
protein. The researchers performed molecular dynamics simulations to try to
determine how the ligand could enter or leave, which suggested large
conformational changes in a flexible region of the protein. Isothermal
titration calorimetry (ITC) showed that the binding of compound 9 is enthalpically
driven, with an unfavorable entropy. Although interpreting thermodynamics is
fraught, this result makes intuitive sense given the hydrogen bonds formed and
the fact that the molecule seems to rigidify the protein.
Biophysics is interesting, but of
course biology is what was driving the program. Compound 9 is potent in a
variety of cell assays and is also selective for RORγt2 over other nuclear hormone
receptors. However, it is also mostly insoluble, and although it did show
efficacy in a rodent inflammation model, plasma concentrations of compound 9 were
highly variable between individual rats, which the authors attribute to poor physicochemical
properties.
This is a nice application of
fragment growing and merging that demonstrates how difficult it is to find useful
leads for lipophilic sites: even with favorable biochemistry and biophysics,
the pharmacokinetics are a slog. That said, others have made progress against
similarly hydrophobic targets, so it will be fun to watch this story progress.
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