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Fragment-based covalent ligand discovery

Targeted covalent inhibitors have regained widespread attention in drug discovery and have emerged as powerful tools for basic biomedical research. Fueled by considerable improvements in mass spectrometry sensitivity and sample processing, chemoproteomic strategies have revealed thousands of protein...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lu, Wenchao, Kostic, Milka, Zhang, Tinghu, Che, Jianwei, Patricelli, Matthew P., Jones, Lyn H., Chouchani, Edward T., Gray, Nathanael S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8341086/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34458789
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0cb00222d
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author Lu, Wenchao
Kostic, Milka
Zhang, Tinghu
Che, Jianwei
Patricelli, Matthew P.
Jones, Lyn H.
Chouchani, Edward T.
Gray, Nathanael S.
author_facet Lu, Wenchao
Kostic, Milka
Zhang, Tinghu
Che, Jianwei
Patricelli, Matthew P.
Jones, Lyn H.
Chouchani, Edward T.
Gray, Nathanael S.
author_sort Lu, Wenchao
collection PubMed
description Targeted covalent inhibitors have regained widespread attention in drug discovery and have emerged as powerful tools for basic biomedical research. Fueled by considerable improvements in mass spectrometry sensitivity and sample processing, chemoproteomic strategies have revealed thousands of proteins that can be covalently modified by reactive small molecules. Fragment-based drug discovery, which has traditionally been used in a target-centric fashion, is now being deployed on a proteome-wide scale thereby expanding its utility to both the discovery of novel covalent ligands and their cognate protein targets. This powerful approach is allowing ‘high-throughput’ serendipitous discovery of cryptic pockets leading to the identification of pharmacological modulators of proteins previously viewed as “undruggable”. The reactive fragment toolkit has been enabled by recent advances in the development of new chemistries that target residues other than cysteine including lysine and tyrosine. Here, we review the emerging area of covalent fragment-based ligand discovery, which integrates the benefits of covalent targeting and fragment-based medicinal chemistry. We discuss how the two strategies synergize to facilitate the efficient discovery of new pharmacological modulators of established and new therapeutic target proteins.
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spelling pubmed-83410862021-08-26 Fragment-based covalent ligand discovery Lu, Wenchao Kostic, Milka Zhang, Tinghu Che, Jianwei Patricelli, Matthew P. Jones, Lyn H. Chouchani, Edward T. Gray, Nathanael S. RSC Chem Biol Chemistry Targeted covalent inhibitors have regained widespread attention in drug discovery and have emerged as powerful tools for basic biomedical research. Fueled by considerable improvements in mass spectrometry sensitivity and sample processing, chemoproteomic strategies have revealed thousands of proteins that can be covalently modified by reactive small molecules. Fragment-based drug discovery, which has traditionally been used in a target-centric fashion, is now being deployed on a proteome-wide scale thereby expanding its utility to both the discovery of novel covalent ligands and their cognate protein targets. This powerful approach is allowing ‘high-throughput’ serendipitous discovery of cryptic pockets leading to the identification of pharmacological modulators of proteins previously viewed as “undruggable”. The reactive fragment toolkit has been enabled by recent advances in the development of new chemistries that target residues other than cysteine including lysine and tyrosine. Here, we review the emerging area of covalent fragment-based ligand discovery, which integrates the benefits of covalent targeting and fragment-based medicinal chemistry. We discuss how the two strategies synergize to facilitate the efficient discovery of new pharmacological modulators of established and new therapeutic target proteins. RSC 2021-02-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8341086/ /pubmed/34458789 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0cb00222d Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Lu, Wenchao
Kostic, Milka
Zhang, Tinghu
Che, Jianwei
Patricelli, Matthew P.
Jones, Lyn H.
Chouchani, Edward T.
Gray, Nathanael S.
Fragment-based covalent ligand discovery
title Fragment-based covalent ligand discovery
title_full Fragment-based covalent ligand discovery
title_fullStr Fragment-based covalent ligand discovery
title_full_unstemmed Fragment-based covalent ligand discovery
title_short Fragment-based covalent ligand discovery
title_sort fragment-based covalent ligand discovery
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8341086/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34458789
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0cb00222d
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