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 Arrive early to attend Protein Kinase Targets (June 4 - 6)
 

MAIN CONFERENCE

Thursday, June 7

7:30 am Registration

8:30 Opening Remarks
Margit Eder, Conference Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute

8:35 Chairperson's Opening Remarks

Opening Keynote

8:40 Hype Versus Reality: How Valuable is Structural Information in Guiding Drug Design?
Mark Murcko, Ph.D., Vice President & Chief Technology Officer, Scientific Advisory Board, Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Structure-Based Drug Design (SBDD) has been around for thirty years. During that time, staggering claims have been made about the value of this technology for improving the effectiveness of drug design. However, while there are indeed a number of well-documented success stories, most would argue that the reality has not lived up to the hype. I will briefly review the history of this field, offer my observations about the conditions under which SBDD is most likely to succeed or fail, and suggest future directions to improve the utility of the technology.

9:25 Engineering Constitutively Active PXR Ligand Binding Domains for Inverse Structure-Based Drug Design
Wenyan Wang, Ph.D., Principal Scientist, Protein Engineering and Biochemistry Group, Structural Chemistry Department, Schering-Plough Research Institute
The nuclear xenobiotic receptor PXR is a ligand inducible transcriptional factor regulating drug-metabolizing enzymes and transporters, therefore potentially mediating dangerous drug-drug interactions. Upon ligand binding, the C-terminal ligand binding domain (LBD) of PXR complexes with a cellular coactivator (such as steroid receptor coactivator, or SRC1) and triggers downstream activation. In an effort to develop stable and effective PXR construct to design out PXR activity, several recombinant PXR-SRC1 complexes were engineered and evaluated for their stability and activity. A recombinant, polyhistidine-tagged PXR/SRC1 complex derived from a dual plasmid expression system reported in the literature [1-4] contained less than optimum PXR to SRC-1 ratio and was readily precipitated during purification and storage. A translationally-coupled, bicistronic expression system increased the expression level by 5-fold, improved protein solubility, and yielded PXR and SRC1 at ~ 1:1 ratio. However, the purified protein complex still required additional SRC peptide for stabilization. A single polypeptide chain encompassing PXR and a SRC-1 peptide connected with a peptidyl linker (sc-PXR-SRCp) was designed to form an intramolecular complex. This engineered protein (sc-PXR-SRCp) was expressed as a soluble protein which required no additional SRC-1 peptide for stabilization and showed the expected affinity to PXR ligands. The X-ray crystal structures of the protein, in the presence and absence of SR12813, have been determined to high resolution. In addition, a circular dichroism ­ based binding assay was developed to allow quick evaluation of small molecules for PXR liability, making this tethered protein a convenient and effective reagent for structure-based inverse drug design.

9:55 Coffee Break, Exhibit & Poster Viewing

10:30 Structural Characterization and Validation of a Novel Recognition Site in the C-Jun NH2 (JNK) Family of Protein Kinases
Celerino Abad-Zapatero, Ph.D., Associate Research Fellow, Protein Crystallography Laboratory, Abbott Laboratories
Using a combination of affinity selection, NMR and X-ray crystallography micromolar bi-aryl tetrazole leads, binding to a novel non-ATP competitive site, have been identified for the c-jun NH2 family of protein kinases (JNK kinases). In the JNK1-1 isoform, the compounds bind on a ledge of the protein surface exposed by the MAP insertion present in the CMGC family of protein kinases and distant from the active site and from the common docking (CD) site. The binding pocket and residues in its vicinity have been suggested to be important for the bipartite mechanism of ERK2 recognition by regulators and substrates and available data suggests that it is probably shared by all MAP kinases. The novel site is also part of a non-crystallographic dimer interface characterized in the crystallographic structure and probably extant in solution. This type of association is consistent with existing data for ERK2 and might be analogous for the JNK1/MKK7 activation. This novel class of compounds inhibits the activation of JNK1 by the upstream MKK7 kinase and certain members of this class also inhibit the phosphorylation of c-jun in cell assays. Developing more potent and selective analogs by structure-based drug design methods directed towards the JNKs or other MAP kinases might provide new biological insights and could be of therapeutic value.

11:00 Technology Spotlight (Sponsorship Available)

Roundtable Discussions

11:15

1

Effective Teamwork between Medicinal Chemists and Computational Chemists and the Drug Design Education
N. Claude Cohen, Ph.D., Founder & Chief Executive Officer, Synergix Ltd.

3

What is the future of SBDD? What is the future of Structure Biology?
Celerino Abad-Zapatero, Ph.D., Associate Research Fellow, Protein Crystallography Laboratory, Abbott Laboratories

4

Development, testing, and evaluation of new methods for docking and scoring
Richard A. Friesner, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry, Columbia University

5

Driving Pharma Decision-Making: What Behaviors by SBDD Professionals Lead to the Greatest Impact on Drug Discovery?
Mark Murcko, Ph.D., Vice President & Chief Technology Officer, Scientific Advisory Board, Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc.

6

How can Structure-based Drug Design Help Lead Optimization
Jose S. Duca, Ph.D., Senior Scientist, Computer Assisted Drug Design, Schering Plough Research Institute

7

Rational Drug Design and Synthetic Feasibility - Current Research Frontiers
Ulrich Rester, Ph.D., Senior Research Scientist, Medicinal Chemistry, Bayer HealthCare AG

8

The Role of Large Collections of Known Chemical Structures in Enabling Scaffold-Hopping and Structure-Based Design
Anthony Trippe, Ph.D., Senior Innovation Manager, NPD, CAS

9

TBA
Tomi K. Sawyer, Ph.D., Senior Director, Chemical Sciences, Pfizer Research Technology Center

Please Contact Shelley Amster, Conference Director, at samster@healthtech.com if you are interested in moderating other "hot topic" discussions of your choice. Please include the title and a few summary sentences or bullets to highlight the overall theme.

12:45 - 1:30 pm

Luncheon Workshop
Advances in Lead Optimization

Woody Sherman, Ph.D., Application Scientist, Schrödinger, Inc.
In the field of computational structure-based drug design, there is a wide range of available tools for lead optimization. We present recent advances in the Schrödinger suite of tools for lead optimization. We will first present accurate prediction of binding energies using the Glide XP scoring function. Rank ordering of congeneric molecules will then be discussed using Prime MM-GBSA, with an emphasis on using accurate charges derived from quantum mechanics calculations. Finally, we will discuss the use of MCPRO+, which uses Monte Carlo statistical mechanics simulations to compute free energy changes via Free Energy Perturbation (FEP) calculations. The integration of these tools and other advances in the Schrödinger software suite is making lead optimization by computational approaches more feasible and successful.
Sponsored by

1:30 Break

2:00 Chairperson's Opening Remarks

2:05 Roundtable Summary Presentations from Morning Program

2:30 Applied Chemogenomics: (Machine) Learning from the Past
Jeremy L. Jenkins, Ph.D., Research Investigator, Lead Discovery Center, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research Inc.
Despite our best efforts to rationally design drugs for a single target, most compounds have selectivity issues or undesirable off-target effects. However, given the vast institutional knowledge of structure-activity relationships, statistical modeling across thousands of target classes can give hints as to the probable targets, off-targets, and side effects of small molecules. Here we show case studies of using multi-target modeling to predict both primary and off-targets of orphan ligands or entire hitlists from cell-based screens, and to map this knowledge usefully onto compound structures. Further, a global "phylochemical" relationship between targets and adverse drug reactions is assessed.

3:00 Technology Spotlight
High Through-put Fragment Screening
John Barker, Ph.D., Group Leader of X-ray Crystallography and Computational Chemistry, Evotec UK Ltd
The combination of a high quality fragment library with sensitive biochemical screening methods is an effective approach for the identification of weakly active fragment molecules as novel starting points for medicinal chemistry optimisation. We have successfully demonstrated the use of high concentration screening of fragments using a portfolio of single-molecule Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS+plus) detection techniques to ensure the highest reproducibility and sensitivity and have utilized X-ray crystallography to determine the binding mode of active fragments. The information obtained has formed the basis for the subsequent optimisation to improve the potency of the initially identified weakly active fragments.

Sponsored by

3:20 Refreshment Break, Exhibit & Poster Viewing

4:00 Computational Approach to Site-Directed Ligand Discovery
Gergely Toth, Ph.D., Chemistry, Elan Pharmaceuticals, plc
A computational approach, Systematic Conformational Search & Induced FIt (SCI&FI) to site-directed ligand discovery (Tethering) is presented. SCI&FI has the ability to predict the binding site, binding mode and bound dynamics of small molecule fragments covalently tethered to a protein. The SCI&FI method was engineered with the ability to model induced fit conformational changes of the protein due to binding of the tether. SCI&FI generates comprehensive picture of the binding preferences of the tether to the protein by elucidating potential binding sites of the tether and by describing regions of receptor space capable of conformational change due to the binding of the tether. The SCI&FI method provides a complementary approach to experimental tethering. Initial validation of the SCI&FI method is reported by predicting the 3D structure of two Interleukin-2 and an Interleukin-4 tethered-protein systems.

4:30 Virtual Screening in Lead Discovery and Lead Optimization
Ulrich Rester, Ph.D., Senior Research Scientist, Medicinal Chemistry, Bayer HealthCare AG
The early phases of commercial drug discovery programs are increasingly guided by information extracted from three-dimensional structures of the target proteins and in silico design techniques. Key issues of docking and scoring, a popular technique in structure-based drug design, will be outlined as well as the integration of these methods in the lead finding and lead optimization process. Lead identification: HTS andVirtual Screening - A retrospective comparison, Frequent Scaffolds and Frequent Hitters - Identification of novel Protease Inhibitors via Target-based Virtual Screening, Fragment Screening and Fragment Shuffling - Lead optimization: Structure-driven library design via Combinatorial Docking.

5:00 A Novel Computational Technique to Mimic Solvent Entropy
Arthur M. Doweyko, Ph.D., Macromolecular Structure, CADD, Pharmaceutical Research Institute, Bristol-Myers Squibb
Solvent entropy change is the single greatest factor in driving the association of hydrophobic species in aqueous solution. We have developed a novel methodology that simulates the solvation of hydrophobic surfaces by water. A system of virtual solvent particles surrounding the solute governed by arbitrarily applied rules provides a means to estimate the degree of order (Q) imposed by such solvation. Computed changes in Q (dQ) upon complex formation have been found to correlate well with observed binding affinities of host-guest complexes in aqueous solution. Examples are described that illustrate the ability of dQ calculations to identify the correct ligand pose from a set of decoy complexes, as well as provide rank ordering of a set of highly diverse ligand-protein complexes. Comparisons to surface area-based calculations are discussed. The Q methodology holds great promise in the development of predictive structure-based approaches to drug design as it provides a relatively simple means to estimate the hydrophobic effect.

5:30 - 6:30 Networking Reception, Exhibit & Poster Viewing

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