Scott B. Ficarro , Zachary H. Marto , Nicholas M. Girardi , Dingyu Deng , Isabella Jaen Maisonet , Guillaume Adelmant , Laura E. Fleming , Mona Sharafi , Isidoro Tavares , Andrew Zhao , HyoJeon Kim , Hyuk-Soo Seo , Sirano Dhe-Paganon , Sara J. Buhrlage , Jarrod A. Marto
{"title":"开源亲电片段筛选平台确定UCHL1共价抑制剂的化学起点。","authors":"Scott B. Ficarro , Zachary H. Marto , Nicholas M. Girardi , Dingyu Deng , Isabella Jaen Maisonet , Guillaume Adelmant , Laura E. Fleming , Mona Sharafi , Isidoro Tavares , Andrew Zhao , HyoJeon Kim , Hyuk-Soo Seo , Sirano Dhe-Paganon , Sara J. Buhrlage , Jarrod A. Marto","doi":"10.1016/j.slasd.2024.100198","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Target-based screening of covalent fragment libraries with mass spectrometry has emerged as a powerful strategy to identify chemical starting points for small molecule inhibitors or find new binding pockets on proteins of interest. These libraries span diverse chemical space with a modest number of compounds. Screening covalent fragments against purified protein targets reduces the demands on the mass spectrometer with respect to absolute throughput, detection limit, and dynamic range. Given these relaxed analytical requirements, we sought to develop an open-source, medium-throughput mass spectrometry system for target-based covalent fragment screening. Our platform comprises automated, dual LC desalting columns integrated with electrospray ionization for rapid sample introduction and mass spectrometry detection. The system is operated through a simple Python graphical user interface running on commodity microcontroller boards which allow integration with diverse liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry instruments. We provide scripts for fragment pooling, construction of sample batches, along with routines for data processing and visualization. The system enables primary screening of ∼10,000 covalent fragments per day in pooled format. In a proof-of-concept study we executed primary and secondary screens to identify 27 hit fragments against UCHL1, a deubiquitinating enzyme that is emerging as a drug target of interest across multiple clinical indications. We validated and triaged these covalent compounds through a series of orthogonal biochemical and chemoproteomic assays. The most promising chloroacetamide covalent fragment inhibited UCHL1 activity in vitro (IC<sub>50</sub> < 5 µM) and exhibited dose-dependent binding along with good selectivity against 57 cellular DUBs as quantified by activity-based protein profiling.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":21764,"journal":{"name":"SLAS Discovery","volume":"29 8","pages":"Article 100198"},"PeriodicalIF":2.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Open-source electrophilic fragment screening platform to identify chemical starting points for UCHL1 covalent inhibitors\",\"authors\":\"Scott B. Ficarro , Zachary H. Marto , Nicholas M. Girardi , Dingyu Deng , Isabella Jaen Maisonet , Guillaume Adelmant , Laura E. 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Open-source electrophilic fragment screening platform to identify chemical starting points for UCHL1 covalent inhibitors
Target-based screening of covalent fragment libraries with mass spectrometry has emerged as a powerful strategy to identify chemical starting points for small molecule inhibitors or find new binding pockets on proteins of interest. These libraries span diverse chemical space with a modest number of compounds. Screening covalent fragments against purified protein targets reduces the demands on the mass spectrometer with respect to absolute throughput, detection limit, and dynamic range. Given these relaxed analytical requirements, we sought to develop an open-source, medium-throughput mass spectrometry system for target-based covalent fragment screening. Our platform comprises automated, dual LC desalting columns integrated with electrospray ionization for rapid sample introduction and mass spectrometry detection. The system is operated through a simple Python graphical user interface running on commodity microcontroller boards which allow integration with diverse liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry instruments. We provide scripts for fragment pooling, construction of sample batches, along with routines for data processing and visualization. The system enables primary screening of ∼10,000 covalent fragments per day in pooled format. In a proof-of-concept study we executed primary and secondary screens to identify 27 hit fragments against UCHL1, a deubiquitinating enzyme that is emerging as a drug target of interest across multiple clinical indications. We validated and triaged these covalent compounds through a series of orthogonal biochemical and chemoproteomic assays. The most promising chloroacetamide covalent fragment inhibited UCHL1 activity in vitro (IC50 < 5 µM) and exhibited dose-dependent binding along with good selectivity against 57 cellular DUBs as quantified by activity-based protein profiling.
期刊介绍:
Advancing Life Sciences R&D: SLAS Discovery reports how scientists develop and utilize novel technologies and/or approaches to provide and characterize chemical and biological tools to understand and treat human disease.
SLAS Discovery is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes scientific reports that enable and improve target validation, evaluate current drug discovery technologies, provide novel research tools, and incorporate research approaches that enhance depth of knowledge and drug discovery success.
SLAS Discovery emphasizes scientific and technical advances in target identification/validation (including chemical probes, RNA silencing, gene editing technologies); biomarker discovery; assay development; virtual, medium- or high-throughput screening (biochemical and biological, biophysical, phenotypic, toxicological, ADME); lead generation/optimization; chemical biology; and informatics (data analysis, image analysis, statistics, bio- and chemo-informatics). Review articles on target biology, new paradigms in drug discovery and advances in drug discovery technologies.
SLAS Discovery is of particular interest to those involved in analytical chemistry, applied microbiology, automation, biochemistry, bioengineering, biomedical optics, biotechnology, bioinformatics, cell biology, DNA science and technology, genetics, information technology, medicinal chemistry, molecular biology, natural products chemistry, organic chemistry, pharmacology, spectroscopy, and toxicology.
SLAS Discovery is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and was published previously (1996-2016) as the Journal of Biomolecular Screening (JBS).