KRAS Binders Hidden in Nature

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Abstract

Natural products have proven to be a rich source of molecular architectures for drugs. Here, an integrated approach to natural product screening is proposed, which uncovered eight new natural product scaffolds for KRAS-the most frequently mutated oncogenic driver in human cancers, which has remained thus far undrugged. The approach combines aspects of virtual screening, fragment-based screening, structure-activity relationships (SAR) by NMR, and structure-based drug discovery to overcome the limitations in traditional natural product approaches. By using our approach, a new "snugness of fit" scoring function and the first crystal-soaking system of the active form of KRASG12D , the protein-ligand X-ray structures of a tricyclic indolopyrrole fungal alkaloid and an indoloisoquinolinone have been successfully elucidated. The natural product KRAS hits discovered provide fruitful ground for the optimization of highly potent natural-product-based inhibitors of the active form of oncogenic RAS. This integrated approach for screening natural products also holds promise for other "undruggable" targets.

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Bergner, A., Cockcroft, X., Fischer, G., Gollner, A., Hela, W., Kousek, R., … McConnell, D. B. (2019). KRAS Binders Hidden in Nature. Chemistry (Weinheim an Der Bergstrasse, Germany), 25(52), 12037–12041. https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201902810

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