Four of the six approved fragment-derived drugs are kinase
inhibitors, and three of these bind in the active site. Despite these
successes, there are plenty of opportunities for new kinase-directed drugs,
particularly those targeting cancer resistance mutations. In a recent Brief
Bioinform. article, Guang-Fu Yang and colleagues at Central China Normal
University describe a new tool to facilitate these discoveries.
The researchers started by trawling multiple databases such
as kinase.com, DrugBank, ChEMBL, and the Protein Data Bank for kinase
inhibitors. The results were combined and collated to yield a set of 7783
kinase-inhibitor fragment complexes, with more than 3000 unique fragments. Most
of these bind in the “front cleft” of the active site, where the adenine of ATP
normally binds, but several hundred also sit in the so-called back pocket or the
intervening area.
What’s nice is that all this information is available on a
free website called KinaFrag. You can download the structures yourself, but the
site can also be browsed or searched. Fragments are annotated with links to
various databases; here’s an example.
There are some bugs. While I was able to search by
physicochemical parameters such as molecular weight and number of hydrogen bond
donors, I could not get the substructure search to work. I’d be curious as to
whether readers could do so.
To demonstrate the utility of KinaFrag, the researchers
describe a case study in which they started with the anticancer drug
larotrectinib, which inhibits TRK family kinases. However, the molecule is less
effective against several mutations observed in the clinic. Examining the bound
structure revealed that the mutations introduce steric clashes. Retaining the
hinge-binding fragment while performing virtual screening of fragments from
KinaFrag led to molecules such as YT3, potent against both wild type TRKA and two
resistance mutants, and further optimization resulted in YT9.
Not only was YT9 active against the wild type and mutant
forms of TRKA, it showed good oral bioavailability and pharmacokinetics in
rats. Encouragingly, the molecule slowed tumor growth in both wild type and
mutant TRKA mouse xenograft models.
One could debate whether this is an example of FBLD; the
discovery of YT9 could also be considered a classic case of scaffold hopping.
But semantics aside, this is a nice example of thinking in terms of fragmenting molecules.
More broadly, KinaFrag looks like a useful tool for work on kinases –
especially if the substructure search works.
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