Enabling large-scale design, synthesis and validation of small molecule protein-protein antagonists

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Abstract

Although there is no shortage of potential drug targets, there are only a handful known low-molecular-weight inhibitors of protein-protein interactions (PPIs). One problem is that current efforts are dominated by low-yield high-throughput screening, whose rigid framework is not suitable for the diverse chemotypes present in PPIs. Here, we developed a novel pharmacophore-based interactive screening technology that builds on the role anchor residues, or deeply buried hot spots, have in PPIs, and redesigns these entry points with anchor-biased virtual multicomponent reactions, delivering tens of millions of readily synthesizable novel compounds. Application of this approach to the MDM2/p53 cancer target led to high hit rates, resulting in a large and diverse set of confirmed inhibitors, and co-crystal structures validate the designed compounds. Our unique open-access technology promises to expand chemical space and the exploration of the human interactome by leveraging in-house small-scale assays and user-friendly chemistry to rationally design ligands for PPIs with known structure. © 2012 Koes et al.

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Koes, D., Khoury, K., Huang, Y., Wang, W., Bista, M., Popowicz, G. M., … Camacho, C. J. (2012). Enabling large-scale design, synthesis and validation of small molecule protein-protein antagonists. PLoS ONE, 7(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0032839

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