| Literature DB >> 28070724 |
Mária Szaszkó1, István Hajdú1, Beáta Flachner1, Krisztina Dobi1, Csaba Magyar2, István Simon2, Zsolt Lőrincz1, Zoltán Kapui3, Tamás Pázmány3, Sándor Cseh1, György Dormán4.
Abstract
A glutaminyl cyclase (QC) fragment library was in silico selected by disconnection of the structure of known QC inhibitors and by lead-like 2D virtual screening of the same set. The resulting fragment library (204 compounds) was acquired from commercial suppliers and pre-screened by differential scanning fluorimetry followed by functional in vitro assays. In this way, 10 fragment hits were identified ([Formula: see text]5 % hit rate, best inhibitory activity: 16 [Formula: see text]). The in vitro hits were then docked to the active site of QC, and the best scoring compounds were analyzed for binding interactions. Two fragments bound to different regions in a complementary manner, and thus, linking those fragments offered a rational strategy to generate novel QC inhibitors. Based on the structure of the virtual linked fragment, a 77-membered QC target focused library was selected from vendor databases and docked to the active site of QC. A PubChem search confirmed that the best scoring analogues are novel, potential QC inhibitors.Keywords: Differential scanning fluorimetry; Fragment linking; Fragment-based screening; Glutaminyl cyclase
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28070724 DOI: 10.1007/s11030-016-9717-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Divers ISSN: 1381-1991 Impact factor: 2.943