Javier L. Baylon*, Matthew J. Chalkley, Tony Siu, Wilson Shou, Yongnian Sun, Xianmei Cai, Anthony Paiva, Shivani Patel, Tatyana Zvyaga and Dahlia R. Weiss,
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New Multiparameter Index Is a Strong Predictor of Oral Bioavailability for Heterobifunctional Degraders
Ligand-directed degraders (LDDs) are heterobifunctional molecules that degrade proteins by engaging the ubiquitin-protein-ligase (E3) system. LDDs (also known as proteolysis-targeting chimeras) consist of a target-engaging moiety, an E3 ligase-binding moiety, and a bridging linker. Due to their size and physicochemical complexity, these molecules do not adhere to well-established rules of lead optimization. Achieving oral bioavailability remains a key challenge in the optimization of LDDs as therapeutic agents. In this study, we build on the previously established Balanced Permeability Index (BPI) (a metric that integrates size, polarity, and lipophilicity) by incorporating an additional descriptor to account for molecular shape. Our new combined metric, termed Bifunctional Bioavailability Index (BBI), can differentiate oral bioavailability of LDDs in our data set more effectively than polarity, lipophilicity, or size separately. Notably, BBI is also more effective than in vitro cell permeability assays in predicting orally bioavailable LDDs. These results support the use of BBI as a computational tool for designing and optimizing bioavailable bifunctional degraders.
期刊介绍:
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters is interested in receiving manuscripts that discuss various aspects of medicinal chemistry. The journal will publish studies that pertain to a broad range of subject matter, including compound design and optimization, biological evaluation, drug delivery, imaging agents, and pharmacology of both small and large bioactive molecules. Specific areas include but are not limited to:
Identification, synthesis, and optimization of lead biologically active molecules and drugs (small molecules and biologics)
Biological characterization of new molecular entities in the context of drug discovery
Computational, cheminformatics, and structural studies for the identification or SAR analysis of bioactive molecules, ligands and their targets, etc.
Novel and improved methodologies, including radiation biochemistry, with broad application to medicinal chemistry
Discovery technologies for biologically active molecules from both synthetic and natural (plant and other) sources
Pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic studies that address mechanisms underlying drug disposition and response
Pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic studies used to enhance drug design and the translation of medicinal chemistry into the clinic
Mechanistic drug metabolism and regulation of metabolic enzyme gene expression
Chemistry patents relevant to the medicinal chemistry field.