Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Identification of Covalent Cyclic Peptide Inhibitors Targeting Protein–Protein Interactions Using Phage Display

 Sijie Wang, Franco F. Faucher, Matilde Bertolini, Heeyoung Kim, Bingchen Yu, Li Cao, Katharina Roeltgen, Scott Lovell, Varun Shanker, Scott D. Boyd, Lei Wang, Ralf Bartenschlager, and Matthew Bogyo

Journal of the American Chemical Society 2025

DOI: 10.1021/jacs.4c15843

Peptide macrocycles are promising therapeutics for a variety of disease indications due to their overall metabolic stability and potential to make highly selective binding interactions with targets. Recent advances in covalent macrocycle peptide discovery, driven by phage and mRNA display methods, have enabled the rapid identification of highly potent and selective molecules from large libraires of diverse macrocycles. However, there are currently limited examples of macrocycles that can be used to disrupt protein–protein interactions and even fewer examples that function by formation of a covalent bond to a target protein. In this work, we describe a directed counter-selection method that enables identification of covalent macrocyclic ligands targeting a protein–protein interaction using a phage display screening platform. This method utilizes binary and ternary screenings of a chemically modified phage display library, employing the stable and weakly reactive aryl fluorosulfate electrophile. We demonstrate the utility of this approach using the SARS-CoV-2 spike-ACE2 protein–protein interaction and identify multiple covalent macrocyclic inhibitors that disrupt this interaction. The resulting compounds displayed antiviral activity against live virus that was irreversible after washout due to the covalent binding mechanism. These results highlight the potential of this screening platform for developing covalent macrocyclic drugs that disrupt protein–protein interactions with long lasting effects.

Molecular Pharmacology of the Antibiotic Fosfomycin, an Inhibitor of Peptidoglycan Biosynthesis

Dennis H. Kim and Watson J. Lees Biochemistry 2025 DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.4c00522 The antibiotic fosfomycin is an epoxy-phosphonate natur...