4.7 Article

Scaffold Hopping Transformations Using Auxiliary Restraints for Calculating Accurate Relative Binding Free Energies

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 3710-3726

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.1c00214

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [GM078114, GM107104]
  2. NSF [MCB-1330259]
  3. Shenzhen Special Fund for the Development of Strategic Emerging Industries
  4. Laufer Center for Physical and Quantitative Biology at Stony Brook University

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In drug discovery, altering drug compound structures to improve binding affinity and properties is common. This study presents a new method for simulating the challenging process of "scaffold hopping", demonstrating high accuracy in modeling linker contraction or expansion.
In silico screening of drug-target interactions is a key part of the drug discovery process. Changes in the drug scaffold via contraction or expansion of rings, the breaking of rings, and the introduction of cyclic structures from acyclic structures are commonly applied by medicinal chemists to improve binding affinity and enhance favorable properties of candidate compounds. These processes, commonly referred to as scaffold hopping, are challenging to model computationally. Although relative binding free energy (RBFE) calculations have shown success in predicting binding affinity changes caused by perturbing R-groups attached to a common scaffold, applications of RBFE calculations to modeling scaffold hopping are relatively limited. Scaffold hopping inevitably involves breaking and forming bond interactions of quadratic functional forms, which is highly challenging. A novel method for handling ring opening/closure/contraction/expansion and linker contraction/expansion is presented here. To the best of our knowledge, RBFE calculations on linker contraction/expansion have not been previously reported. The method uses auxiliary restraints to hold the atoms at the ends of a bond in place during the breaking and forming of the bonds. The broad applicability of the method was demonstrated by examining perturbations involving small-molecule macrocycles and mutations of proline in proteins. High accuracy was obtained using the method for most of the perturbations studied. The rigor of the method was isolated from the force field by validating the method using relative and absolute hydration free energy calculations compared to standard simulation results. Unlike other methods that rely on.-dependent functional forms for bond interactions, the method presented here can be employed using modern molecular dynamics software without modification of codes or force field functions.

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