Literature DB >> 27703080

A Perspective on the Kinetics of Covalent and Irreversible Inhibition.

John M Strelow1.   

Abstract

The clinical and commercial success of covalent drugs has prompted a renewed and more deliberate pursuit of covalent and irreversible mechanisms within drug discovery. A covalent mechanism can produce potent inhibition in a biochemical, cellular, or in vivo setting. In many cases, teams choose to focus on the consequences of the covalent event, defined by an IC50 value. In a biochemical assay, the IC50 may simply reflect the target protein concentration in the assay. What has received less attention is the importance of the rate of covalent modification, defined by kinact/KI. The kinact/KI is a rate constant describing the efficiency of covalent bond formation resulting from the potency (KI) of the first reversible binding event and the maximum potential rate (kinact) of inactivation. In this perspective, it is proposed that the kinact/KI should be employed as a critical parameter to identify covalent inhibitors, interpret structure-activity relationships (SARs), translate activity from biochemical assays to the cell, and more accurately define selectivity. It is also proposed that a physiologically relevant kinact/KI and an (unbound) AUC generated from a pharmacokinetic profile reflecting direct exposure of the inhibitor to the target protein are two critical determinants of in vivo covalent occupancy. A simple equation is presented to define this relationship and improve the interpretation of covalent and irreversible kinetics.

Entities:  

Keywords:  covalent; irreversible; kinetics; occupancy; pharmacokinetics

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27703080     DOI: 10.1177/1087057116671509

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  SLAS Discov        ISSN: 2472-5552            Impact factor:   3.341


  58 in total

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Authors:  Victor S Gehling; John P McGrath; Martin Duplessis; Avinash Khanna; Francois Brucelle; Rishi G Vaswani; Alexandre Côté; Jacob Stuckey; Venita Watson; Richard T Cummings; Srividya Balasubramanian; Priyadarshini Iyer; Priyanka Sawant; Andrew C Good; Brian K Albrecht; Jean-Christophe Harmange; James E Audia; Steven F Bellon; Patrick Trojer; Julian R Levell
Journal:  ACS Med Chem Lett       Date:  2020-05-06       Impact factor: 4.345

2.  Chemical Proteomic Characterization of a Covalent KRASG12C Inhibitor.

Authors:  Aruna Wijeratne; Junpeng Xiao; Christopher Reutter; Kelly W Furness; Rebecca Leon; Mohammad Zia-Ebrahimi; Rachel N Cavitt; John M Strelow; Robert D Van Horn; Sheng-Bin Peng; David A Barda; Thomas A Engler; Michael J Chalmers
Journal:  ACS Med Chem Lett       Date:  2018-05-21       Impact factor: 4.345

3.  Ubiquitin C-Terminal Hydrolase L1: Biochemical and Cellular Characterization of a Covalent Cyanopyrrolidine-Based Inhibitor.

Authors:  Aaron D Krabill; Hao Chen; Sajjad Hussain; Chao Feng; Ammara Abdullah; Chittaranjan Das; Uma K Aryal; Carol Beth Post; Michael K Wendt; Paul J Galardy; Daniel P Flaherty
Journal:  Chembiochem       Date:  2019-11-07       Impact factor: 3.164

Review 4.  Selective and Effective: Current Progress in Computational Structure-Based Drug Discovery of Targeted Covalent Inhibitors.

Authors:  Giulia Bianco; David S Goodsell; Stefano Forli
Journal:  Trends Pharmacol Sci       Date:  2020-11-02       Impact factor: 14.819

Review 5.  Kinase inhibitors: the road ahead.

Authors:  Fleur M Ferguson; Nathanael S Gray
Journal:  Nat Rev Drug Discov       Date:  2018-03-16       Impact factor: 84.694

Review 6.  Mechanistic enzymology in drug discovery: a fresh perspective.

Authors:  Geoffrey A Holdgate; Thomas D Meek; Rachel L Grimley
Journal:  Nat Rev Drug Discov       Date:  2017-12-01       Impact factor: 84.694

Review 7.  Proteolysis-targeting chimeras in drug development: A safety perspective.

Authors:  Kevin Moreau; Muireann Coen; Andrew X Zhang; Fiona Pachl; M Paola Castaldi; Goran Dahl; Helen Boyd; Clay Scott; Pete Newham
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2020-02-25       Impact factor: 8.739

Review 8.  Covalent Versus Non-covalent Enzyme Inhibition: Which Route Should We Take? A Justification of the Good and Bad from Molecular Modelling Perspective.

Authors:  Aimen Aljoundi; Imane Bjij; Ahmed El Rashedy; Mahmoud E S Soliman
Journal:  Protein J       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 2.371

9.  Catch and Release Photosensitizers: Combining Dual-Action Ruthenium Complexes with Protease Inactivation for Targeting Invasive Cancers.

Authors:  Karan Arora; Mackenzie Herroon; Malik H Al-Afyouni; Nicholas P Toupin; Thomas N Rohrabaugh; Lauren M Loftus; Izabela Podgorski; Claudia Turro; Jeremy J Kodanko
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2018-10-22       Impact factor: 15.419

10.  Small-molecule covalent bond formation at tyrosine creates a binding site and inhibits activation of Ral GTPases.

Authors:  Khuchtumur Bum-Erdene; Degang Liu; Giovanni Gonzalez-Gutierrez; Mona K Ghozayel; David Xu; Samy O Meroueh
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-03-16       Impact factor: 11.205

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