27 April 2015

Tenth Annual Fragment-based Drug Discovery Meeting

Last week marked the tenth anniversary of CHI’s three-day Drug Discovery Chemistry conference in San Diego. The conference consists of six tracks, with three happening simultaneously. The FBDD track is the only one which dates all the way back to the beginning in 2006. In fact, this is the oldest recurring fragment conference, predating both the Royal Society Fragments meetings as well as the independent FBLD meetings.

It’s worth reflecting on how far fragments have come since 2006. Back then, as Rod Hubbard (Vernalis and University of York) noted, most of the talks were prospective and methodological. Even as late as 2010 there were talks describing how dedicated fragment groups needed to be shielded from the larger organization. Now fragments are mainstream: a large fraction of the talks in the protein-protein interaction track involved fragments, as did both plenary keynote addresses to the entire conference.

Harren Jhoti’s keynote focused on lessons learned at Astex over the past 15 years. There has been some debate in the literature over ligand efficiency (LE), and one slide that struck me was a summary of 782 dissociation constants (measured by ITC) against 20 projects. The vast majority of these compounds had LE > 0.3 kcal/mol/atom. Given that Astex has put multiple fragment-derived drugs into the clinic and was acquired by Otsuka in one of the largest M&A events of 2013, the metric appears to have some utility.

Still, it’s important not to be dogmatic, particularly for difficult targets. Harren described a program for XIAP/cIAP where they started with an extremely weak fragment with LE < 0.2, but its binding mode was sufficiently interesting that they were willing to work on it. This program also revealed the importance of biophysical measurements, as functional activity was uninterpretable and even misleading until higher affinity compounds were discovered.

One theme throughout the conference was the observation that fragments bind at multiple sites on proteins. Harren noted that Astex researchers have found fragments bound (crystallographically) to 54 sites on 25 targets – an average of 2.2 sites per target. Some targets are even more site-rich: Joe Patel (AstraZeneca) performed a crystallographic screen on a complex of Ras and SOS and found four binding sites, including one previously discussed here. In this effort, 1200 fragments were screened in pools of 4, and in one case two fragments from the same pool each bound only when they were both present at the same time – each fragment alone showed no binding by NMR or crystallography.

Troy Messick (Wistar) described his work against the EBNA1 protein from Epstein-Barr virus. An HTS screen of 600,000 compounds came up with at best marginal hits, but soaking 100 different Maybridge fragments into protein crystals led to 20 structures, with fragments bound to four different sites. Some of these fragments were then merged to give cell-active compounds with good oral bioavailability.

Rather than exploring different ligands binding at different sites, Ravi Kurumbail (Pfizer) described an interesting case of the same ligand binding at different sites. A screen against the kinase ITK identified a (large) fragment that could bind both in the adenine binding pocket as well as a nearby pocket, as determined crystallographically. Determining the affinities of the same fragment for the two sites necessitated some clever SPR and enzymology, but did lead to a highly selective series.

In terms of targets, BCL-family proteins were certainly well-represented, featuring heavily in talks by Chudi Ndubaku (Genentech, selective Bcl-xL inhibitors), Mike Serrano-Wu (Broad Institute, MCL-1 inhibitors), Zaneta Nikolovska-Coleska (University of Michigan, MCL-1), Roman Manetsch (Northeastern, Bcl-xL and MCL-1), and Andrew Petros (AbbVie, BCL-2 and MCL-1). Of course, it was AbbVie (neé Abbott) that pioneered BCL inhibitors as well as FBLD in general, and I was happy to hear that there is a renaissance occurring there, with fragment approaches being applied to all targets, even those undergoing HTS.

Finally, there were some interesting practical lessons on library design. Peter Kutchukian described how the Merck fragment library was rebuilt to incorporate more attractive molecules that chemists would be excited to pursue. There is an ongoing debate as to whether a fragment library should be maximally diverse or contain related compounds to provide some SAR directly out of the screen, and in the case of the Merck library the decision was to target roughly five analogs in the primary library, with a secondary set of available fragments for follow-up studies.

The utility of having related fragments in a library was illustrated in a talk by Mark Hixon (Takeda) about their COMT program. A HTS screen had failed, and even a screen of 11,000 fragments came up with only 3 hits (with an additional close analog found by catalog screening). Remarkably, all of these are extremely closely related, but other analogs in the library didn’t show up; had they not had multiple representatives of this chemotype in their library they would have come up empty-handed.

In the interest of space I’ll close here. Teddy will post his thoughts later this week, and please share your own. CHI has announced that next year’s meeting will be held in San Diego the week of April 19. And there are still several great events on the calendar for this year!

1 comment:

Julie Tucker said...

Publications describing the AZ FBDD approach to Ras-SOS and the Pfizer dual site ITK inhibitors are available from Journal of Medicinal Chemistry (doi: 10.1021/jm501660t) and Biochemical Journal (doi: 10.1042/BJ20131139) respectively.