Letitia Shunmugam, Pritika Ramharack, Mahmoud E. S. Soliman
The Protein Journal
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10930-017-9736-8
Over the last 2 decades, covalent inhibitors have gained much popularity and is living up to its reputation as a powerful tool in drug discovery. Covalent inhibitors possess many significant advantages including increased biochemical efficiency, prolonged duration and the ability to target shallow, solvent exposed substrate-binding domains. However, rapidly mounting concerns over the potential toxicity, highly reactive nature and general lack of selectivity have negatively impacted covalent inhibitor development. Recently, a great deal of emphasis by the pharmaceutical industry has been placed toward the development of novel approaches to alleviate the major challenges experienced through covalent inhibition. This has unexpectedly led to the emergence of “selective” covalent inhibitors. The purpose of this review is not only to provide an overview from literature but to introduce a technical guidance as to how to initiate a systematic “road map” for the design of selective covalent inhibitors which we believe may assist in the design and development of optimized potential selective covalent HCV NS3/4A viral protease inhibitors.
A blog highlighting recent publications in the area of covalent modification of proteins, particularly relating to covalent-modifier drugs. @CovalentMod on Twitter, @covalentmod@mstdn.science on Mastodon, and @covalentmod.bsky.social on BlueSky
Linking of fragments in neighboring binding sites is one of the optimization strategies in fragment-based drug discovery, where additive or even more substantial bioactivity improvements can be realized. However, such efforts present a considerable challenge when one fragment binds covalently to the target protein, as small modifications can influence the correct positioning of the covalent warhead toward the targeted nucleophilic residue. Here, we present a case study of fragment linking that yielded single-digit micromolar, covalent inhibitors of the SARS-CoV-2 main protease, starting from fragments that were inactive in the biochemical assay. Using structural information from a recent, high-throughput crystallographic fragment screen, we show that the success of fragment linking in the design of targeted covalent inhibitors is heavily impacted by several factors, including the warhead type, the labeling chemistry, and even subtle changes in the designed linker. Notably, we observe that induced fit effects might override the original fragment orientations in the linked molecule, highlighting the need for reliable structure verification, especially in consecutive rounds of fragment elaboration.
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