| Literature DB >> 32533387 |
Sridhar Sreeramulu1, Christian Richter1, Till Kuehn2, Kamal Azzaoui3, Marcel Jules José Blommers3, Rebecca Del Conte4, Marco Fragai4, Nils Trieloff5, Peter Schmieder5, Marc Nazaré5, Edgar Specker5, Vladimir Ivanov6, Hartmut Oschkinat5, Lucia Banci4, Harald Schwalbe7,8,9.
Abstract
Fragment-based screening has evolved as a remarkable approach within the drug discovery process both in the industry and academia. Fragment screening has become a more structure-based approach to inhibitor development, but also towards development of pathway-specific clinical probes. However, it is often witnessed that the availability, immediate and long-term, of a high quality fragment-screening library is still beyond the reach of most academic laboratories. Within iNEXT (Infrastructure for NMR, EM and X-rays for Translational research), a EU-funded Horizon 2020 program, a collection of 782 fragments were assembled utilizing the concept of "poised fragments" with the aim to facilitate downstream synthesis of ligands with high affinity by fragment ligation. Herein, we describe the analytical procedure to assess the quality of this purchased and assembled fragment library by NMR spectroscopy. This quality assessment requires buffer solubility screening, comparison with LC/MS quality control and is supported by state-of-the-art software for high throughput data acquisition and on-the-fly data analysis. Results from the analysis of the library are presented as a prototype of fragment progression through the quality control process.Entities:
Keywords: Drug discovery; FBDD; Fragment; Ligands; NMR; Quality control; Solubility
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32533387 PMCID: PMC7683495 DOI: 10.1007/s10858-020-00327-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomol NMR ISSN: 0925-2738 Impact factor: 2.835
Fig. 1Chemical clustering of the iNEXT-fragment library. a Cluster size versus cluster ID (on the top right, an example of compounds belonging to cluster number 301 with five class members). b Examples for molecular clusters with 1, 2, 3 and 4 members
The average values of the molecular descriptors used for the calculation of the QED
| Molecular descriptors | Mean |
|---|---|
| Molecular weight | 219.80 |
| SlogP | 1.59 |
| Number of hydrogen bonds donors | 2.79 |
| Number of hydrogen bonds acceptors | 1.27 |
| Topological polar surface area | 55.36 |
| Number of rotatable bonds | 2.60 |
| Number of aromatic rings | 1.43 |
| Number of unwanted substructure alerts | 0.17 |
| QED | 0.77 |
Number of compounds with unwanted substructures according to Bickerton et al.
| Unwanted substructures (Usub) | Number of compounds with Usub |
|---|---|
| 2-Halo pyridine | 2 |
| Acyl hydrazine | 7 |
| Aliphatic long chain | 1 |
| Aniline | 37 |
| Catechol | 9 |
| Cumarine | 3 |
| Cyanamide | 2 |
| Hydantoin | 3 |
| Hydrazine | 8 |
| Hydroquinone | 7 |
| Hydroxamic acid | 3 |
| Mercapto-1,3,4- thiadiazole | 5 |
| Oxygen–nitrogen single bond | 29 |
| Phenol ester | 5 |
| Thiocarbonyl group | 11 |
| Triple bond | 9 |
Fig. 2Quality control of the fragments. a Screenshot of the graphical display representing the CMC-a based analysis of 358 fragments in a compact form. This window displays the determined concentration and structural consistency (green means consistent; red means inconsistent, blue indicates technical complications, light colors-results from automation, intense colors-results from manual analysis). If the additional option to show the concentration is checked, then the sizes of the displayed circles are proportional to the value. Samples within the range of the expected concentration have a white background. b1H-NMR spectrum of a fragment acquired in buffer (blue, top) and in d-DMSO (red, bottom). The proton signal overlapped by the water signal in the red spectrum gets resolved in the blue spectrum
Fig. 3Example spectra of fragments. a Degradation of fragment, b degradation of fragment as seen in 1H-NMR and contradiction between NMR and LC–MS results, (c, d) impurities, (e, f) too little compound, (g, h) passing NMR, but fails in LC–MS
Fig. 4Schematic representation of the workflow during the stringent quality control of the iNEXT fragment library