| Literature DB >> 25935873 |
Gerhard Fischer1, Maxim Rossmann1, Marko Hyvönen2.
Abstract
Protein-protein interactions (PPI) have become increasingly popular drug targets, with a number of promising compounds currently in clinical trials. Recent research shows, that PPIs can be modulated in more ways than direct inhibition, where novel non-competitive modes of action promise a solution for the difficult nature of PPI drug discovery. Here, we review recently discovered PPI modulators in light of their mode of action and categorise them as disrupting versus stabilising, orthosteric versus allosteric and by their ability to affect the proteins' dynamics. We also give recent examples of compounds successful in the clinic, analyse their physicochemical properties and discuss how to overcome the hurdles in discovering alternative modes of modulation.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25935873 PMCID: PMC4728186 DOI: 10.1016/j.copbio.2015.04.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Opin Biotechnol ISSN: 0958-1669 Impact factor: 9.740
Protein–protein interaction modulators with structural data made available in 2012–2014. ‘# HA’ describes the average number of heavy atoms, MW is the average molecular weight in g/mol, the ‘sp3-ratio’ is the ratio of sp3-centres per heavy atom, and the PDB ligand name describes the three letter code used for the respective compounds in the Protein Data Bank, with commonly used names for compounds in clinical trials in parentheses.
| # HA | MW [g/mol] | sp3-ratio | Disease area | Ligand name in PDB (Clinical trial molecule name) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL | 47.6 | 677.3 | 0.23 | Cancer | 1Y1 (ABT-199), 1XV, 1XJ (ABT-263), H1I, H0Y, X8U, X0B, LC3, LC6, 38H |
| MDM2 | 38.4 | 565.7 | 0.33 | Cancer | 20Q, 20U, I09 (RG7388), NUT, 1F0 (RG7112) |
| Menin/MLL | 28.4 | 401.5 | 0.55 | Cancer | 2S6, 2VK, 2S7, 2S, 2SE, 2SF, EPE, 0RO, 0RT |
| Cdc20/APC_C | 27.0 | 438.7 | 0.19 | Cancer | WR7 |
| Keap1/Cul3 | 36.0 | 493.7 | 0.67 | Cancer | SXJ |
| CaMBD/calmodulin | 10.0 | 136.2 | 0.00 | CNS, cardiovascular diseases | PHU |
| RPA70N | 19.7 | 304.4 | 0.16 | Cancer | 2NL, ZCL, 1FJ |
| Rad51 | 11.3 | 151.8 | 0.07 | Cancer | 5H1, 5MI, 4ME, LZ1, ABV, TR7, 03, 1NP |
| PDK1/PIF | 25.5 | 363.5 | 0.14 | Cancer | MJF, 21O |
| pVHL/HIF-1a | 33.5 | 475.4 | 0.43 | Cancer | 3JG, 3JK, 3JT, 3JU, 3JV, 3JF, 3JS, 3JH, 3JO, 3JJ |
| ATAD2/Kac | 13.9 | 194.4 | 0.33 | Cancer | 39O, 39R, 39U, 12Q, 38S, 38T, MB3, TDR, THM |
| BAZ2B/Kac | 15.7 | 227.7 | 0.32 | Cancer | 2LW, 2LX, 2LY |
| BET BRD2-4/Kac | 23.1 | 336.5 | 0.21 | Cancer, atherosclerosis | 1AJ, 1A9, 1A8, 1A7, 1A6, 1A5, 1A4, 1A3, 15E, 14Z, 14X, 13F, 0NS, WSH, EAM (i-BET762), 73B (I-BET726, GSK1324726A), 9S3, 1K0 (RVX208) |
| CBP&P300/Kac | 30.7 | 425.8 | 0.30 | Cancer, neurodegeneration | 2LK, 2LO, 2LL |
| NMT | 30.3 | 454.8 | 0.39 | Infection | EN5, EN5, JJ1, 7AH, A6K, A6M, UEK, VIQ, QMI, 2CB, 2CD, PS8 |
| K-ras/Sos | 23.4 | 352.6 | 0.26 | Cancer | BEN, 9LI, BZI, 0QW, 0QX, 0QV, 0QR, 0QY |
| PDEδ/K-ras | 34.0 | 445.5 | 0.12 | Cancer | 18F, 1M1, 1M0, 17X |
| K-ras/Sos | 25.1 | 424.3 | 0.40 | Cancer | 20H, 20G, 21J, 21C, 21F, 21Y, 21K, 21M, 21S, 22C |
| Transthyretin | 20.5 | 300.2 | 0.12 | Amyloidosis, polyneuropathy | 16V, 3MI (Tafamidis) |
| PMA2/14-3-3 | 33.5 | 450.4 | 0.03 | Herbicide, cancer | 0MT, YR1 |
| CDC34A/Ubiquitin | 29.0 | 442.3 | 0.31 | Cancer | U94 |
| HIV-1 integrase/LEDGF-p75 | 29.0 | 416.7 | 0.27 | Infection | TQ2, LF9, TQX, 0L9, 4BI (BI-224436) |
| GluAN1/GluAN2 | 25.0 | 339.5 | 0.48 | CNS disorders | QEM |
| GluA2 dimer | 18.5 | 248.3 | 0.30 | CNS disorders | CX5 (CX516), MQR |
| DHP synthase dimer | 17.0 | 249.7 | 0.16 | Infection | 2O6, 2O8, 6DH, Z13 |
Indicates approved drugs or compounds that are currently in clinical trials.
Figure 1Binding modes of modulators (orange) influencing PPIs. The affinity of two proteins (blue/grey) can be decreased by either orthosteric (a) or allosteric disruption (b), while stabilisation can occur through binding at a composite site formed by the protein complex (c) or allosterically (d). Note that all binding modes but (a) are non-competitive in nature.
Figure 3Examples for PPI modulation. The small molecules are represented as a space filling model in orange, the individual proteins in blue and grey. (a) Dimer of transthyretin stabilised by two molecules of Tafamidis (PDB: 3tct). (b) RVX-208 bound to the monomer of BRD2(BD2), preventing interaction with peptide ligand (PDB: 4mr6). (c) Allosteric stabilisation of the Cdc34–Ubiquitin interaction through small molecule CC0651 (PDB: 4mdk). (d) Allosteric destabilisation of the KRas–Sos–interaction through a covalently attached inhibitor (PDB: 4lv6). The image is a superpositioning of the apo-KRas/Sos-complex and the KRas-ligand complex. (e) Allosteric inhibitor at the interface of a DHPS-dimer, affecting its intramolecular dynamics (PDB: 4nhv).
Figure 2Schematic representation of secondary effects of interfacial binders through protein dynamics. (a) An interfacial binder affecting the oligomerisation of the protein complex, similar to HIV-integrase (see text). (b) An interfacial binder allosterically changing the functionality of the protein's active site.