Here’s a paper from the Shoichet lab at UCSF that
illustrates one of the major problems that drug designers encounter –
predicting conformational changes (“entropy” to a physicist). What the study
does is to plug a series of eight very simple congeneric ligands – benzene,
methyl, ethyl and propyl benzene all the way to hexyl benzene - into a model
protein cavity, in this case a lysozyme mutant, and observe the corresponding
changes in protein conformation by solving the crystal structures. And the
results aren’t exactly heartwarming for early phase drug discovery scientists.
Synthesizing congeneric series of ligands is a standard
process in lead optimization and the elephant in the room which is often
banished out of sight by drug designers is the possibility of large
conformational changes in the protein caused by small changes in ligand
structure (the other assumption is constancy in ligand binding orientation, and
even that doesn’t always hold). The assumption is that any minor change in
structure in the ligand would be accommodated by equivalent, small amino acid
side chain movements in the protein.
This study shows that at best that assumption is a
faith-based assumption which should always be considered provisional. What the
authors observe is that instead of a smooth transition of amino acid side chain
movements, you see a discrete and far more significant change in protein
backbone movement, resulting in a subtle population of different states which
bind the ligands. The difference in binding energy going from benzene to hexyl
benzene is not too large – about 1.5 kcal/mol – but you are already seeing
backbone movements. What is perhaps a bit more reassuring than this observation
is that some of the discrete states are mirrored in lysozyme structures found
in the PDB - but the authors looked at 121 structures to substantiate the
result. Not the kind of numbers you would expect to find in the PDB for your
typical novel drug discovery target.
The conclusions of the paper are a bit discomforting for at
least two reasons. Firstly as mentioned above, drug designers often assume
constancy or smooth and minor side chain changes in protein conformation when
testing congeneric ligands in lead optimization. It’s quite clear that this is
always a bit of a gamble: if something as simple as a change in molecular weight could lead to such divergent changes, what would small but important changes or reversals in polarity do? And then one also starts wondering how much weird or
divergent SAR could potentially be explained by such unexpected backbone
conformational changes.
Secondly, these kinds of changes pose a real problem for
molecular modelers. As the paper says, you would need to go to pretty long
MD (molecular dynamics) simulations or more radical protein modeling to look at
backbone changes; even today, modeling backbone changes by either physics-based
methods (like MD) or knowledge-based techniques (like Rosetta) is both less
validated and more computationally expensive.
Lastly though, this study is another example of why drug discovery is hard even at a basic scientific level. Countless factors thwart the best intentions of drug designers at every stage, and uncertainty in predicting protein backbone conformational changes must rank pretty high on that list.
Lastly though, this study is another example of why drug discovery is hard even at a basic scientific level. Countless factors thwart the best intentions of drug designers at every stage, and uncertainty in predicting protein backbone conformational changes must rank pretty high on that list.
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