Fragment-based drug discovery is one of the most utilized approaches for the identification of novel weakly binding ligands, by efficiently covering a wide chemical space with rather few compounds and by allowing more diverse binding modes to be found. This approach has led to various clinical candidates and approved drugs. Halogen bonding, on the other hand, has gained traction in molecular design and lead optimization, but could offer additional benefits in early drug discovery. Screening halogen-enriched fragments (HEFLibs) could alleviate problems associated with the late introduction of such a highly geometry dependent interaction. Usually, the binding mode is then already dominated by other strong interactions. Due to the fewer competing interactions in fragments, the halogen bond should more often act as an anchor point for the binding mode. Previously, we proposed a fragment library with a focus on diverse binding modes that involve halogens for gaining initial affinity and selectivity. Herein, we demonstrate the applicability of these HEFLibs with a small set of diverse enzymes: the histone-lysine N-methyltransferase DOT1L, the indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1), the AP2-associated protein kinase 1 (AAK1), and the calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase type 1G (CAMK1G). We were able to identify various binding fragments via STD-NMR. Using ITC to verify these initial hits, we determined affinities for many of these fragments. The best binding fragments exhibit affinities in the one-digit micromolar range and ligand efficiencies up to 0.83 for AAK1. A small set of analogs was used to study structure-affinity relationships and hereby analyze the specific importance of each polar interaction. This data clearly suggests that the halogen bond is the most important interaction of fragment 9595 with AAK1.
We conceived the
Halogen-Enriched Fragment Library (HEFLib) to
investigate the potential of halogen bonds in the early stages of
drug discovery. As the number of competitive interactions increases
with ligand size, we reasoned that a binding mode relying on halogen
bonding is more likely for fragments than highly decorated molecules.
Thus, fragments could feature unexplored binding modes. We screened
the HEFLib against the human kinase DYRK1a and verified micromolar
binding fragments via isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). The
crystal structure of one fragment revealed a noncanonical binding
mode, despite the fragment’s classical hinge binding motif.
In addition, the fragment occupies a secondary binding site. Both
binding modes feature a halogen bond, which we evaluated by ab initio calculations. Structure–affinity relationship
(SAR) from a set of analogues improves the affinity, provides a promising
fragment-growth vector, and highlights the benefits and applicability
of halogen bonds in early lead development.
Fragment screening of the challenging drug target T-p53-Y220C with our diversity optimized HEFLib leads to diverse reversible and covalent binding modes.
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