Privileged Structures and Polypharmacology within and between Protein Families.

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Date
2018-12-13ICR Author
Author
Meyers, J
Chessum, NEA
Ali, S
Mok, NY
Wilding, B
Pasqua, AE
Rowlands, M
Tucker, MJ
Evans, LE
Rye, CS
O'Fee, L
Le Bihan, Y-V
Burke, R
Carter, M
Workman, P
Blagg, J
Brown, N
van Montfort, RLM
Jones, K
Cheeseman, MD
Type
Journal Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Polypharmacology is often a key contributor to the efficacy of a drug, but is also a potential risk. We investigated two hits discovered via a cell-based phenotypic screen, the CDK9 inhibitor CCT250006 (1) and the pirin ligand CCT245232 (2), to establish methodology to elucidate their secondary protein targets. Using computational pocket-based analysis, we discovered intrafamily polypharmacology for our kinase inhibitor, despite little overall sequence identity. The interfamily polypharmacology of 2 with B-Raf was used to discover a novel pirin ligand from a very small but privileged compound library despite no apparent ligand or binding site similarity. Our data demonstrates that in areas of drug discovery where intrafamily polypharmacology is often an issue, ligand dissimilarity cannot necessarily be used to assume different off-target profiles and that understanding interfamily polypharmacology will be important in the future to reduce the risk of idiopathic toxicity and in the design of screening libraries.
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Research team
Medicinal Chemistry 1
Medicinal Chemistry 3
Hit Discovery & Structural Design
Language
eng
Date accepted
2018-11-16
License start date
2018-12
Citation
ACS medicinal chemistry letters, 2018, 9 (12), pp. 1199 - 1204
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC