31 December 2019

Review of 2019 reviews

The year ends, and with it the awkward teenage phase of the twenty-first century. As we have done since 2012, we're using this last post of the year to highlight conferences and reviews over the previous twelve months.

There were some good events, including CHI’s Fourteenth Annual Fragment-based Drug Discovery meeting in San Diego in April, their Discovery on Target meeting in Boston in September, and the third Fragment-based Drug Design Down Under 2019 in Melbourne in November, which also saw the launch of the Centre for Fragment-Based Design. Our updated schedule of 2020 events will publish next week.

Turning to FBLD reviews, Martin Empting (Helmholtz-Institute for Pharmaceutical Research Saarland) and collaborators published a general overview in Molecules. This is a nice up-to-date summary, covering library design, methods to find, confirm, and rank fragments, and optimization approaches. It’s also open access so you can read it anywhere.

Targets
Protein-protein interactions can be particularly challenging drug targets, and these are covered in a Eur. J. Med. Chem. review by Dimitrios Tzalis (Taros Chemicals), Christian Ottmann (Technische Universiteit Eindhoven) and colleagues. The focus is on clinical compounds, and several of these – including venetoclax, ASTX660, mivebresib, onalespib – are discussed in detail. The article is particularly useful in discussing late-stage optimization of pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties. It also provides a nice summary of physicochemical properties for fragment hits and derived candidates.

Target selectivity is always important, and this is the focus of a review in Exp. Opin. Drug Disc. by Rainer Riedl and collaborators at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences and the Università degli Studi dell’Insubria. Although the broader topic is de novo drug design, fragment-based methods are prominent, and include case studies we’ve discussed on nNOS, pantothenate synthetase, and MMP-13.

In terms of specific targets, Fubao Huang, Kai Wang, and Jianhua Shen at the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica provide an extensive review of lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2) in Med. Res. Rev. This serine hydrolase has been studied for four decades but – as the researchers note – “divergence seems to be ubiquitous among Lp-PLA2 studies.” At least this is not for lack of good chemical tools, fragment-derived (see here, here, and here) and otherwise.

Methods
Although NMR has fallen behind crystallography in our latest poll, that is certainly not reflected in terms of reviews. In particular, 19F NMR is covered in three papers. CongBao Kang (A*STAR) manages to pack a lot (including 261 references!) into a concise review in Curr. Med. Chem. Topics include protein-observed 19F NMR, in which one or more fluorine atoms are introduced into a protein genetically, enzymatically, or chemically, as well as ligand-observed methods, in which fluorine-containing small molecules are directly observed or used as probes that are displaced by non-fluorine-containing molecules.

Protein-observed 19F NMR (PrOF NMR) is covered in Acc. Chem. Res. by William Pomerantz and colleagues at the University of Minnesota. Although the first example was published 45 years ago, only in the past few years has the technique been used for studying protein-ligand interactions. The researchers note that introducing fluorines into aromatic residues is ideal because they are relatively rare, simplifying interpretation, and overrepresented at protein-protein interactions, maximizing utility. Several case studies are described, and even proteins as large as 180 kDa are amenable to the technique.

Ligand-based fluorine NMR screening is simpler and more common than techniques that focus on proteins, and this topic is thoroughly reviewed by Claudio Dalvit (Lavis) and Anna Vulpetti (Novartis) in J. Med. Chem. After a section on theory, the researchers discuss library design, including a long section on quality control (which involves assessing solubility, purity, and aggregation of the molecule in a SPAM filter). Direct and competition-based screening approaches are covered in detail; for the latter, a new method for determining binding constants is provided. The paper concludes with more than a dozen case studies. Clearly much has changed in the ten years since I wondered “why fluorine-labeled fragments are not used more widely.” This perspective is a definitive guide to the topic.

Moving to less common methods for characterizing fragments, György Ferenczy and György Keserű (Research Center for Natural Sciences, Budapest) cover thermodynamic profiling in Expert Opin. Drug Disc. After discussing several case studies, they conclude that “thermodynamic quantities are not suitable endpoints for medicinal chemistry optimizations” due to the complexity of contributing factors. This is consistent with another recent paper on the subject (see here), though the information provided is still interesting for understanding molecular interactions.

And although you might have thought the 2017 VAPID publication was the last word on the limitations of ligand efficiency (LE), Pete Kenny has published a splenetic jeremiad on the topic in J. Cheminform. (see also his blog post on the topic, which includes a sea serpent). This is largely a retread of a 2014 article on the same topic (reviewed by Teddy in his inimitable manner here). Pete also describes a more complicated alternative to LE involving residuals, though unfortunately he provides no evidence that it provides more useful information. Pete is of course correct to remind us that metrics have limitations, but assertions that LE “should not even be considered to be a metric” are overwrought.

Chemistry
Two articles discuss virtual chemical libraries. In J. Med. Chem., W. Patrick Walters (Relay Therapeutics) describes efforts to measure, enumerate, and explore chemical space. He notes that false positives could quickly overwhelm a virtual screen of a hundred million molecules, but as we saw earlier this year, progress is being made. Indeed, Torsten Hoffmann (Taros Chemicals) and Marcus Gastreich (BioSolveIT) focus on navigating the vastness of chemical space in Drug Disc. Today. They note that the Enamine REAL Space is up to 3.8 billion commercially accessible compounds, more than double the number of stars in the Milky Way. But this pales in comparison to the 1020 potential compounds in Merck’s MASSIV space. Just storing the chemical structures of these in compressed format would require 200,000 terabytes – and searching them exhaustively is beyond current technology.

Ratmir Derda and Simon Ng (University of Alberta) discuss “genetically encoded fragment-based discovery” in Curr. Opin. Chem. Biol. This involves starting with a known fragment that is then coupled to a library of peptides and screened to find tighter binders. The researchers provide a number of case studies, though adding even a small peptide to a fragment will generally have deleterious effects on ligand efficiency. And – Rybelsus not withstanding – oral delivery of peptides is challenging.

Finally, Vasanthanathan Poongavanam, Xinyong Liu, and Peng Zhang, and collaborators at Shandong University, University of Bonn, University of Southern Denmark, and K.U. Leuven review “recent strategic advances in medicinal chemistry” in J. Med. Chem. Among a wide range of topics from drug repurposing to antibody-recruiting molecules is a nice, up-to-date section on target-guided synthesis. As I opined a couple years ago, I still doubt whether this will ever be generally practical, but from an intellectual standpoint I’m happy to see work continue on the approach.

And with that, Practical Fragments says goodbye to the teens and wishes you all a happy new year. Thanks for reading and commenting. May 2020 bring wisdom, and progress.

3 comments:

Peter Kenny said...

Happy New Year, Dan, and I’m greatly honored to have my LE perspective included in your review of fragment stuff from 2019. My motivation for writing it was that I actually think that ligand efficiency is a good concept (even though the commonly used metrics stink) that provides an alternative to descriptor-based multivariate modelling (some machine learning methods fit into this category) for taking account of physicochemical properties in drug design.

Given that LE metrics have been used to sell fragment-based approaches to the drug discovery community, I can certainly understand (and even sympathize with to some extent) the sensitivity of the FBDD establishment to criticism of ligand efficiency metrics. My reason for asserting that LE should not be described as a metric is that perception of efficiency changes with the units in which affinity is expressed. Given that metrics are used to effectively quantify perception, this would actually be a very serious criticism of any metric. I’m guessing that, if you were able to provide a coherent counter argument, you would have done so rather than simply dismissing the assertion as “overwrought”.

Dan Erlanson said...

Hi Pete,

Happy new year to you too, and thanks for commenting!

Regarding a “coherent counter argument,” I think our differences are clearly expressed in the 2017 VAPID post and the comments to this 2015 post, in which you agreed that changing the definition of standard state can change the sign of ΔG˚. Despite all the tumult throughout the world, the laws of thermodynamics still seem to hold, so I did not feel the need to rehash them.

Peter Kenny said...

The argument that LE should not be considered to a metric actually differs from the criticism of LE on thermodynamic grounds. The essence of the thermodynamic argument is that if your conclusions change when you change the definition of the standard state then you’re not actually doing thermodynamics. The ‘not a metric’ argument is tied to units and would also apply if, for example, you were scaling the logarithm of an inactivation rate constant by number of non-hydrogen atoms. You can actually define standard states without units (e.g. in terms of mole fractions) but if you’re claiming to be doing thermodynamics then your conclusions cannot change with the definition of the standard state. Put more bluntly, to demonstrate that perception changes in response to a change in a unit or a change in the definition of the standard state is a most excellent bullshit detector.