One of the talks at the Discovery
on Target meeting last month described the discovery of small molecule
inhibitors of IL17A, a pro-inflammatory cytokine. Antibody-based drugs against
this protein are useful for psoriasis and other diseases, but they require regular
injections. Also, because the antibodies stick around for a long time and dampen
the immune response, they could leave patients less able to combat an infection.
An orally available small molecule could solve both these problems, but
blocking protein-protein interactions is generally difficult. Early progress
towards this goal has been published (open access) in Sci. Reports by Eric
Goedken and collaborators at AbbVie.
The researchers started by 13C-labeling
the methyl groups of isoleucine, leucine, valine, and methionine. They then
performed a 2D NMR screen ([1H, 13C]-HSQC) of ~4000
fragments in pools of 12, with each fragment at 1 mM. This yielded multiple
hits, including compound 4. Interestingly, the chemical shift perturbations
(CSPs) caused by this fragment were distinct from those caused by known previously disclosed binders, suggesting a different binding site. In particular, one
of these CSPs could be traced to a methionine residue. The full NMR assignment
of the protein was not conducted, but modeling and mutagenesis narrowed the
possibility down to a methionine near the C-terminus.
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR)
experiments revealed that compound 4 had very low affinity, but two rounds of
optimization led to compounds 5 and 6. At this point the researchers were able
to solve the crystal structures of these molecules bound to IL17A. The protein
exists as a homodimer, and the molecules bind symmetrically, with two copies per
homodimer. Moreover, the two copies bind close to one another.
In addition to these fragments,
the researchers had also identified compound 7, and a crystal structure
revealed that this binds in a similar fashion. Merging compound 7 with compound
6 and linking two copies of the resulting monomer led ultimately to dimeric
compound 10, with nanomolar affinity by both SPR and isothermal titration
calorimetry (ITC). This molecule inhibited the binding of IL17A with its
receptor in a biochemical assay and also showed low micromolar activity in a
cellular assay.
This is a nice paper that bears
some similarity to previous work we highlighted from AbbVie on a different
cytokine, TNFα. There too fragment linking was used initially. As in the present
case, that effort led to a drop in ligand efficiency and a significant increase
in the size of the molecules, resulting in suboptimal pharmaceutical
properties. Identifying drug-like small molecules has been an ongoing challenge
for IL17A; peptide-based inhibitors and macrocycles have been found that bind
to other sites on the protein, but many of these are also well beyond
rule-of-five space. As the researchers conclude, “we look forward to seeing
which of these sites prove to be the most amenable to producing optimized drug
candidates.”
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