More than three years have passed
since SARS-CoV-2 first entered human airways, and it looks set to stay despite
the rapid development of remarkably protective vaccines. Drugs such as nirmatrelvir
are effective, but as with any infectious agent we’ll need lots more to
counteract inevitable mutational resistance. Practical Fragments has
previously discussed virtual and experimental screens against individual
SARS-CoV-2 viral proteins and RNA. In Angew. Chem., Harald Schwalbe at Goethe University Frankfurt and more than six dozen collaborators in ten
countries describe (open access) the results of NMR screens against most of the
viral proteome.
The researchers, all part of the
COVID19-NMR project, used ligand-detected NMR methods to screen the DSI-PL
library against 25 of the 28 viral proteins. As we’ve written previously, the
DSI-PL library consists of 768 diverse fragments designed for rapid chemistry
follow-up. Fragments were mostly screened in mixtures of twelve, with spectra
visually inspected to identify hits for confirmation.
Fragments were classified as
binders if they passed any of these four criteria: “chemical shift
perturbations (CSPs) or severe line broadening, sign change in the waterLOGSY
(wLOGSY), STD signal or significant decrease of signal intensity in a T2-relaxation
experiment.”
A total of 311 hits were
identified, with between 2 and 154 hits per protein. In some cases multiple forms
of the protein were screened. For example, three forms of the main protease (called
by various groups nsp5, Mpro, and CLpro) were screened, yielding from 12 to 78
binders, only 8 of which were common to all three screens. One of the protein constructs
forms the biologically relevant dimer (the others are monomers), and the
researchers suggest this could account for the differences. True, but I suspect
many of the “hits” against some of these proteins are artifacts or non-specific
binders: researchers at Vernalis, for example, prioritize fragments that hit in
two or three different NMR assays over those that hit in just one.
Crystal structures were available
for 18 of the proteins screened, and these were computationally analyzed using
FTMap to identify between one and three potential small-molecule binding hot spots on each protein. FTMap uses 16 very small probe molecules (such as benzene
and urea) to interrogate the protein surface, and a comparison between the NMR
hits with those from FTMap was comfortingly good. For example, a protein with a
hot spot preferring benzene and urea also bound a fragment containing those moieties. While this by no means proves that the fragments are binding at a
given hot spot, it is suggestive.
Not surprisingly, most of the
fragments are weak binders: titration experiments revealed that five of ten
tested had dissociation constants > 5 mM, though one came in at double-digit
micromolar. This result is consistent with work last year that found that most
of the crystallographic hits against Mpro were also weak binders, and also consistent
with an independent NMR study of Mpro.
Despite these limitations, this campaign
provides multiple starting points to develop chemical probes. Laudably, the
chemical structures of all the DSI-PL library compounds and the targets hit by
each are provided in the supporting information. Last week we highlighted how
fragment hits against the SARS-CoV-2 Nsp3 macrodomain were advanced to
sub-micromolar inhibitors. The Angew. Chem. work provides fragment starting
points against two dozen more targets.
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