| Literature DB >> 34948022 |
Roberto León1, Jorge Soto-Delgado2, Elizabeth Montero1, Matías Vargas1.
Abstract
A semi-exhaustive approach and a heuristic search algorithm use a fragment-based drug design (FBDD) strategy for designing new inhibitors in an in silico process. A deconstruction reconstruction process uses a set of known Hsp90 ligands for generating new ones. The deconstruction process consists of cutting off a known ligand in fragments. The reconstruction process consists of coupling fragments to develop a new set of ligands. For evaluating the approaches, we compare the binding energy of the new ligands with the known ligands.Entities:
Keywords: Hsp90; computational approach; fragment-based drug design; protein inhibitors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34948022 PMCID: PMC8706391 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222413226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Flow chart of the deconstruction-reconstruction approach applied to HSP90 ligands.
Figure 2(A) PU3 ligand of Hsp90 and (B) The five sub-ligands from PU3.
Figure 3Hsp90 co-crystalized (PDB ID: 5LQ9) with ligand in green, and superposition of BIIB021 purine derivative compound in orange.
Figure 4Representation example: A solution composed by one header and two bodies.
Figure 5Change movement example.
Figure 6Swap movement example.
Hsp90 inhibitors: resorcinol [25].
| Id | SMILES | BE |
|---|---|---|
| M01 | CCNC(=O)c1noc(-c2cc(Cl)c(O)cc2O)c1-c1ccc(OC)cc1 | -7.9 |
| M02 | CCNC(=O)c1[nH]nc(-c2cc(Cl)c(O)cc2O)c1-c1ccc(OC)cc1 | -8.0 |
| M03 | CCNC(=O)c1noc(c2cc(Cl)c(O)cc2O)c1c3ccc(C[NH+]4CCOCC4)cc3 | -7.6 |
| M04 | O=c1[nH]nc(-c2cc(Br)c(O)cc2O)n1-c1ccccc1F | -8.1 |
| M06 | CCc1cc(-c2n[nH]c(C)c2-c2ccccc2F)c(O)cc1O | -8.7 |
| M07 | O=c1[nH]nc(-c2ccc(O)cc2O)n1-c1ccccc1F | -8.3 |
| M09 | COc1ccc(-c2c(-c3ccc(O)cc3O)n[nH]c2C)cc1 | -8.3 |
| M10 | CN(Cc1ccco1)C(=O)c1cc(-c2n[nH]c(=O)n2-c2ccccc2F)c(O)cc1O | -9.6 |
| M11 | Cc1ccccc1-n1c(-c2cc(C(=O)N(C)Cc3cccs3)c(O)cc2O)n[nH]c1=O | -8.9 |
| M12 | CCCCN(C)C(=O)c1cc(-c2n[nH]c(=O)n2-c2ccccc2F)c(O)cc1O | -9.1 |
| M13 | Oc1cc(O)c(-c2ccnn2-c2ccccc2Cl)cc1CCc1ccccn1 | -9.7 |
| M14 | CCCN(C)S(=O)(=O)c1cc(-c2n[nH]c(=O)n2-c2ccccc2F)c(O)cc1O | -8.6 |
| M15 | CC(C)N(C)S(=O)(=O)c1cc(-c2n[nH]c(=O)n2-c2ccccc2F)c(O)cc1O | -8.9 |
| M25 | CC(C)N(C)S(=O)(=O)c1cc(-c2n[nH]c(=O)n2-c2ccccc2Cl)c(O)cc1O | -8.1 |
| M26 | CCCN(C)C(=O)c1cc(-c2n[nH]c(=O)n2-c2ccccc2C)c(O)cc1O | -8.4 |
| M27 | Cc1ccccc1-n1c(-c2cc(C(=O)N(C)Cc3ccccc3)c(O)cc2O)n[nH]c1=O | -9.3 |
| M28 | CCCCCCN(C)C(=O)c1cc(-c2ccnn2-c2ccccc2C)c(O)cc1O | -9.0 |
| M29 | Cc1cccc(CN(C)C(=O)c2cc(-c3n[nH]c(=O)n3-c3ccccc3C)c(O)cc2O)c1 | -10.5 |
| M30 | Cc1ccccc1-n1c(-c2cc(C(=O)N(C)CC3CCCO3)c(O)cc2O)n[nH]c1=O | -8.7 |
| M31 | CCCCN(C)C(=O)c1cc(-c2n[nH]c(=O)n2-c2ccccc2)c(O)cc1O | -9.3 |
| M32 | Cc1ccccc1-n1nccc1-c1cc(C(=O)N(C)Cc2ccco2)c(O)cc1O | -9.2 |
| M33 | Cc1ccccc1-n1c(-c2ccc(O)cc2O)n[nH]c1=O | -8.2 |
| M34 | O=c1[nH]nc(-c2ccc(O)cc2O)n1-c1ccccc1Cl | -8.1 |
| M35 | CCc1ccccc1-n1c(-c2ccc(O)cc2O)n[nH]c1=O | -8.2 |
| M36 | CCCN(C)C(=O)c1cc(-c2n[nH]c(=O)n2-c2ccccc2F)c(O)cc1O | -9.0 |
| M61 | CCNC(=O)c1noc(-c2cc(C(C)C)c(O)cc2O)c1-c1ccc(C[NH+]2CCOCC2)cc1 | -8.2 |
Hsp90 inhibitors: hydroxy-indazole [25].
| Id | SMILES | BE |
|---|---|---|
| M08 | Cc1n[nH]c2cc(O)c(-c3ccnn3-c3ccccc3)cc12 | -8.7 |
| M37 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc5c(c4)OCO5)cc23)c1 | -11.3 |
| M38 | C[NH+]1CCC(c2ccc(N(C)C(=O)c3cc4c(CCC(C)(C)C)n[nH]c4cc3O)cc2)CC1 | -9.2 |
| M39 | CCCCN(C)C(=O)c1n[nH]c2cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c3ccc(N4CCOCC4)cc3)cc12 | -9.0 |
| M40 | CN(Cc1ccc(Cl)cc1)C(=O)c2cc3c(Cc4ccccc4)n[nH]c3cc2O | -10.6 |
| M41 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)Cc4ccccc4)cc23)c1 | -10.5 |
| M42 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)Cc4ccc(Cl)cc4)cc23)c1 | -10.4 |
| M43 | Oc1cc2[nH]nc(Cc3ccccc3)c2cc1-c1ccnn1-c1ccccc1 | -9.7 |
| M44 | Cc1ccc(N(C)C(=O)c2cc3c(Cc4cccc(C)c4)n[nH]c3cc2O)cc1 | -10.8 |
| M45 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc(N5CCOCC5)cc4)cc23)c1 | -10.7 |
| M46 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccccc4)cc23)c1 | -10.5 |
| M47 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc(N5CCCCC5)cc4)cc23)c1 | -10.9 |
| M48 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc(N(C)C)cc4)cc23)c1 | -10.4 |
| M49 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc(N5CC[NH2+]CC5)cc4)cc23)c1 | -10.7 |
| M50 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc(N5CCN(C)CC5)cc4)cc23)c1 | -10.1 |
| M62 | CO[C@H]1CCN(C(=O)c2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc(N5CCOCC5)cc4)cc23)C1 | -8.4 |
| M63 | CO[C@H]1CCCN(C(=O)c2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc(N5CCOCC5)cc4)cc23)C1 | -9.5 |
| M64 | CN(C(=O)c1cc2c(C(=O)N3CCCC3)n[nH]c2cc1O)c1ccc(N2CCOCC2)cc1 | -9.9 |
| M65 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc(N5CCOCC5=O)cc4)cc23)c1 | -10.3 |
| M66 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4ccc(F)cc4)cc23)c1 | -10.7 |
| M67 | COc1cccc(N(C)C(=O)c2cc3c(Cc4cccc(C)c4)n[nH]c3cc2O)c1 | -10.8 |
| M68 | Cc1cccc(Cc2n[nH]c3cc(O)c(C(=O)N(C)c4cccc(C)c4)cc23)c1 | -11.0 |
| M69 | CN(C(=O)c1cc2c(cc1O)[nH]nc2C(=O)N1CCOCC1)c1ccc(N2CCOCC2)cc1 | -10.3 |
Hsp90 inhibitors: “others” [25].
| Id | SMILES | BE |
|---|---|---|
| M05 | COc1ccc(-c2c(C#N)c(N)nc3sc(C(N)=O)c(N)c23)cc1OCCCC(=O)O | -8.4 |
| M17 | N#Cc1ccc(N2CCN(CCCc3c[nH]c4cc(O)c(C#N)cc34)CC2)cc1 | -8.7 |
| M18 | Brc1cnc2[nH]cnc2c1C(=O)NC1c2ccccc2-c2c(-c3cnc4ccccc4c3)cccc21 | 4.7 |
| M24 | Nc1cc(C(=O)NC2c3ccccc3-c3c(-c4nc5ccncc5[nH]4)cccc32)ccn1 | -4.5 |
| M60 | C#CCCCn1c(Cc2cc(OC)c(OC)c(OC)c2Cl)nc2c(N)nc(F)nc21 | -8.0 |
| M19 | c1cnc2[nH]ccc2c1C(=O)N[C@@H]1c2ccccc2c2c1cccc2c1[nH]c2c(n1)cc(cc2)F | 4.2 |
| M20 | O=C(NC1c2ccccc2-c2c(-c3nc4ccncc4[nH]3)cccc21)c1ccnc2[nH]ccc12 | 0.2 |
| M58 | Cc1cnc(Cn2ccc3c(Cl)nc(N)nc32)c(C)c1Cl | -9.0 |
| M59 | COc1c(C)cnc(Cn2cc(C#CCC(C)(C)O)c3c(Cl)nc(N)nc32)c1C | -6.9 |
| M21 | Cc1nn(-c2ccc(C(N)=O)c(N[C@H]3CC[C@H](O)CC3)c2)c2cccc(-c3cnc4ccccc4c3)c12 | 9.2 |
| M22 | Cc1cn(-c2ccc(C(N)=O)c(N[C@H]3CC[C@H](O)CC3)c2)c2c1C(=O)CC(C)(C)C2 | -10.8 |
| M23 | Cc1cn(-c2ccc(C(N)=O)c(NC3CCC(=O)CC3)c2)c2c1C(=O)CC(C)(C)C2 | -10.9 |
| M51 | Nc1nc(C(=O)N2Cc3ccc(O)cc3C2)c2ccccc2n1 | -11.0 |
| M52 | Nc1nc(C(=O)N2Cc3ccccc3C2)c2cc(O)ccc2n1 | -10.5 |
| M53 | C[NH+]1CCN(S(=O)(=O)c2ccccc2-c2ccc3nc(N)nc(C(=O)N4Cc5ccccc5C4)c3c2)CC1 | -7.7 |
| M54 | CNCc1ccccc1-c1ccc2nc(N)nc(C(=O)N3Cc4ccccc4C3)c2c1 | -11.3 |
| M55 | Nc1nc(C(=O)N2Cc3ccccc3C2)c2cc(-c3cc(F)c(F)cc3CCc3nnn[nH]3)ccc2n1 | -10.8 |
| M56 | Nc1nc(C(=O)N2Cc3ccccc3C2)c2ccccc2n1 | -11.0 |
| M71 | Cc1ccc2nc(N)nc(C(=O)N3Cc4ccccc4C3)c2c1 | -11.0 |
Figure 7Tanimoto similarity matrix.
Groups for the experiment. Each ligand belongs to some family [25]. The ligand structure specification is in Table 1, Table 2 and Table 3. The bold, cursive or underlined ligand belongs to the resorcinol, hydroxy-indazole or “others” family respectively.
| Group | KL Library |
|---|---|
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 |
The number of known ligands (# KL), the best binding energy () of known ligands, the number of fragments (# SL), the number of new ligands (# NL), the best binding energy () of new ligands and the computational time () in minutes for each group with the semi-exhaustive approach.
| G | # KL |
| # SL | # NL |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 5 | −8.7 | 25 | 581 | −12.2 | 89.1 |
| 2 | 10 | −10.6 | 48 | 2061 | −12.8 | 276.8 |
| 3 | 15 | −11.3 | 81 | 5848 | −12.4 | 815.9 |
| 4 | 20 | −11.0 | 95 | 7861 | −13.0 | 1092.2 |
| 5 | 25 | −11.0 | 114 | 12,266 | −12.6 | 1515.7 |
| 6 | 30 | −11.3 | 153 | 10,163 | −12.9 | 2730.4 |
| 7 | 35 | −11.3 | 177 | 28,910 | −13.0 | 3546.9 |
| 8 | 40 | −11.3 | 237 | 51,514 | −11.4 | 3661.7 |
Figure 8New ligand structures with the best binding energy obtained with the semi-exhaustive approach for each group.
New ligands with best binding energy using the semi-exhaustive approach.
| G | New Ligand (SMILES) |
|---|---|
| 1 | [C@H]1(N[C@@H]2[C@@H](N)N=C(F)N[C@H]2N1NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12) |
| [C@@H]1Nc2ccncc2N1 | |
| 2 | C(=O)(c1ccnc2[nH]ccc12)NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12 |
| 3 | c1(ccc(N)cc1NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12)NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12 |
| 4 | c1(ccc(cc1NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12)N1CCCN1)NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12 |
| 5 | C(=O)([SH](O)(O)c1ccccc1)NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12 |
| 6 | c1(ccc(cc1NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12)N1CCCN1)NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12 |
| 7 | c1(ccc(cc1NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12)[C@@H]1NNNN1)NC1c2ccccc2c2ccccc12 |
| 8 | [C@H]1(ONC(=C1[C@@H]1NNc2cc(O)ccc12)c1cc2[C@H](C)NNc2cc1O) |
| [C@@H]1NNc2cc(O)ccc12 |
The best binding energy () of known ligands, the best binding energy () and the computational time () in minutes with the semi-exhaustive approach, the average binding energy (), the best binding energy () and the average computational time () in minutes for each group with the heuristic search approach. The binding energy equal or lower than the obtained by the semi-exhaustive approach is shown in bold.
| G |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | −8.7 | −12.2 | 89.1 | −12.04 ± 0.3 |
| 76.2 ± 20.2 |
| 2 | −10.6 | −12.8 | 276.8 | −12.00 ± 0.1 | −12.3 | 104.1 ± 44.8 |
| 3 | −11.3 | −12.4 | 815.9 | −11.98 ± 0.3 |
| 66.1 ± 27.9 |
| 4 | −11.0 | −13.0 | 1092.2 | −12.10 ± 0.3 | −12.4 | 65.1 ± 11.6 |
| 5 | −11.0 | −12.6 | 1515.7 | −11.86 ± 0.9 |
| 72.4 ± 25.9 |
| 6 | −11.3 | −12.9 | 2730.4 | −12.08 ± 0.4 | −12.7 | 74.8 ± 19.9 |
| 7 | −11.3 | −13.0 | 3546.9 | −11.92 ± 0.9 | −12.8 | 61.8 ± 49.9 |
| 8 | −11.3 | −11.4 | 3661.7 | −10.80 ± 0.5 |
| 44.3 ± 18.2 |
Figure 9New ligand structures with the best binding energy obtained with the heuristic search approach for each group.
New ligands with best binding energy using the heuristic search approach.
| G | New Ligand (SMILES) |
|---|---|
| 1 | Clc1ccc(CN2CCNCC2)cc1 |
| 2 | CN(NC1c2ccccc2-c2ccccc21)c1cnc2ccccc2c1 |
| 3 | NCc1cc2c(NNC3c4ccccc4-c4ccccc43)c[nH]c2cc1O |
| 4 | Cc1cn(-c2ccnc3[nH]ccc23)c2c1C(=O)CC(C)(C)C2 |
| 5 | Cc1cccc(-c2nc3cc(F)ccc3[nH]2)c1 |
| 6 | CNc1ccc(-c2ccnc3[nH]ccc23)cc1-c1ccccc1C |
| 7 | CNc1cc(NC2c3ccccc3-c3ccccc32)c(C)c(N2CCCCC2)c1Cl |
| 8 | c1ccc(-c2ccccc2)cc1 |
Figure 10Best docking position for each new ligand obtained by (A) semi-exhaustive approach and (B) heuristic search approach.
Figure 11Computational time for each group.