Fragmenstein: predicting protein-ligand structures of compounds derived from known crystallographic fragment hits using a strict conserved-binding-based methodology.

Fragmenstein: predicting protein-ligand structures of compounds derived from known crystallographic fragment hits using a strict conserved-binding-based methodology.

Publication date: Jan 13, 2025

Current strategies centred on either merging or linking initial hits from fragment-based drug design (FBDD) crystallographic screens generally do not fully leaverage 3D structural information. We show that an algorithmic approach (Fragmenstein) that ‘stitches’ the ligand atoms from this structural information together can provide more accurate and reliable predictions for protein-ligand complex conformation than general methods such as pharmacophore-constrained docking. This approach works under the assumption of conserved binding: when a larger molecule is designed containing the initial fragment hit, the common substructure between the two will adopt the same binding mode. Fragmenstein either takes the atomic coordinates of ligands from a experimental fragment screen and combines the atoms together to produce a novel merged virtual compound, or uses them to predict the bound complex for a provided molecule. The molecule is then energy minimised under strong constraints to obtain a structurally plausible conformer. The code is available at https://github. com/oxpig/Fragmenstein .Scientific contributionThis work shows the importance of using the coordinates of known binders when predicting the conformation of derivative molecules through a retrospective analysis of the COVID Moonshot data. This method has had a prior real-world application in hit-to-lead screening, yielding a sub-micromolar merger from parent hits in a single round. It is therefore likely to further benefit future drug design campaigns and be integrated in future pipelines.

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Concepts Keywords
Crystallographic Conformer generation
Drug De novo design
Moonshot Fragment elaboration
Parent Fragment linking
Reliable Fragment merging
Fragment-based drug design
Hit discovery
Molecular mechanics

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease IDO protein
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
pathway REACTOME Reproduction
disease IDO process
disease IDO algorithm
drug DRUGBANK Ademetionine
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
drug DRUGBANK Oxygen
drug DRUGBANK Nitrogen
drug DRUGBANK Spinosad
disease IDO quality
disease MESH Covid19
drug DRUGBANK Aspartame
drug DRUGBANK L-Cysteine
drug DRUGBANK Methyl isocyanate
drug DRUGBANK L-Glutamine
drug DRUGBANK Histidine
disease IDO assay
drug DRUGBANK Adenine
drug DRUGBANK Guanosine
disease MESH ARC
drug DRUGBANK 3 7 11 15-Tetramethyl-Hexadecan-1-Ol
drug DRUGBANK Alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor
drug DRUGBANK Ethionamide
drug DRUGBANK Beta-D-Glucose
drug DRUGBANK Thrombin
drug DRUGBANK (S)-Des-Me-Ampa

Original Article

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