Fragment-Based Drug Discovery

Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 16th Annual

Fragment-Based Drug Discovery

From Small Organic Compounds to Potential Therapeutics Against Intracellular Targets

May 18-19, 2021 | ALL TIMES EASTERN DAYLIGHT (UTC-04:00)

Fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD), an increasingly successful approach for finding initial 'drug-like' hits upon which to chemically build small molecule drug leads, is particularly compelling for difficult drug targets such as protein-protein interactions (PPIs) that often lack good small molecule binding sites. Cambridge Healthtech Institute's 16th Annual Fragment-Based Drug Discovery conference convenes FBDD practitioners to discuss advances in the field such as building upon covalent fragments for drug leads, pros and cons of various fragment libraries and applying orthogonal biophysical methods to screen for and prosecute hits. We will also showcase successful fragment screening campaigns that resulted in hits that have progressed to drug leads or beyond

Tuesday, May 18

9:20 am LIVE: Greet ’n’ Go Welcome Gathering

NMR ADVANCES FOR FBDD

Andreas Lingel, PhD, Senior Principal Scientist, Global Discovery Chemistry, Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research

Fragment-based lead discovery by fluorine-detected NMR has gained popularity owing to its high sensitivity, robustness, and ease of use. Recently, we introduced a novel broadband NMR experiment and demonstrated its application to efficient library generation, quality control and screening. Resulting fragment hits have a high degree of chemical diversity with many different fluorine motifs, suggesting that the method is generally applicable to successfully obtaining tractable binders for chemistry optimization and targeting a broad range of disease-relevant biomacromolecules.

10:00 am

The 3F Library – Fluorinated, Fsp3-Rich Fragments – Design, Synthesis and NMR Screening

Mads H. Clausen, PhD, Professor, Chemistry, Danish Technical University

The presentation will discuss the design, synthesis, and screening of the 3F library, which contains 115 fluorinated, Fsp3-rich fragments that are shape diverse and natural product-like. The library is perfectly suited for rapid and efficient screening by NMR spectroscopy in a two-stage workflow of 19F- followed by 1H-NMR methods. Hits against four protein targets were widely distributed among the scaffolds and a 67% validation rate was achieved in secondary assays.

10:30 am Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
Stijn Gremmen, PhD, Head of Chemistry, ZoBio

We've previously shown the importance of designing a fragment library around the techniques used to screen it (Siegal et al, DDT, 2007). Here we will discuss further elaboration of the concept based on learnings from multiple fragment hit to lead projects. The impact of a holistic view of fragment chemistry, orthogonal biophysical techniques and structural biology for deriving novel, tractable chemical series will be illustrated. 

 

11:40 am LIVE:

Panel Q&A with Session Speakers

Panel Moderator:
William C.K. Pomerantz, PhD, Associate Professor, Medicinal Chemistry, University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Panelists:
Andreas Lingel, PhD, Senior Principal Scientist, Global Discovery Chemistry, Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research
Mads H. Clausen, PhD, Professor, Chemistry, Danish Technical University
Stijn Gremmen, PhD, Head of Chemistry, ZoBio

PLENARY KEYNOTE SESSION

12:00 pm

PLENARY: New Technologies for Drug Discovery

Bryan L. Roth, PhD, Distinguished Professor, Pharmacology & Psychiatry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

In this talk I will discuss recently invented approaches to accelerate drug discovery. These include a novel approach for directed evolution to create therapeutically targeted nanobodies, new biosensors for GPCRs and ultra-large-scale docking to discover new chemical matter at druggable targets. I will also highlight how these approaches can provide insights into new approaches to target COVID-19 and related disorders.

12:35 pm LIVE:

Q&A Plenary Discussion

Panel Moderator:
Phillip Schwartz, PhD, Principal Scientist, Biophysics, Frontier Medicines
Panelist:
Bryan L. Roth, PhD, Distinguished Professor, Pharmacology & Psychiatry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
12:50 pm Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
1:00 pm Networking Hallway Hangout with Speakers and Poster Presenters - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

APPROACHES FOR FBDD

1:30 pm

CryoEM in Fragment-Based Drug Discovery

Pamela A. Williams, PhD, Director, Astex Pharmaceuticals

I will present several case studies to illustrate how Astex has developed a streamlined pipeline to facilitate fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD) using single-particle cryo-EM.

Recommended Short Course*
SC1: Emerging Chemical Tools for Phenotypic Screening and Target Deconvolution

*All Access VIRTUAL Pricing or separate registration required. See short course page for details.

2:00 pm

Structure-Free Elaboration of Fragments into Novel Allosteric MEK1 Binders

Paolo Di Fruscia, PhD, Senior Research Scientist, Medicinal Chemistry, AstraZeneca

With the aim of discovering novel allosteric MEK1 inhibitors, a fragment-based screening campaign, designed to specifically discover allosteric binders by screening with the ATP-binding site blocked, is reported. These efforts led to the identification of multiple novel allosteric MEK1 binder chemotypes, one of which, advanced in the absence of structural information, was elaborated to sub-µM affinity, with promising physicochemical and in vitro ADMET properties.

2:30 pm

Hijacking Autophagy by Co-Opting LC3 with Fragment Derived Ligands

Micah Steffek, MSc, Senior Principal Scientific Researcher, Biochemical & Cellular Pharmacology, Genentech Inc.

We used fragment-based lead discovery to identify ligands to LC3, a protein that binds and targets autophagy substrates for destruction. LC3 binding sites were determined using X-ray crystallography. Ligands were optimized using traditional SAR approaches. We used newer methods such as peptide mimetics and DNA-encoded library compounds with similar fragment-like building blocks. We aim to create a degrader-equivalent autophagy tool for targeted degradation of proteins too large for the proteosome.

Michael Raba, Dr., Deputy Head, Biophysics and Screening, Crelux, Research Service Division, WuXi AppTec

The HitS business unit is an integral part of the WuXi AppTec Research Services Division (RSD). We deliver customized, integrated hit finding and structure-based drug discovery solutions. By screening our proprietary fragment library by various biophysical methodologies such MST, SPR or nanoDSF we support our clients already at the early stages of their drug development projects.

3:40 pm LIVE:

Panel Q&A with Session Speakers

Panel Moderator:
Jenny Sandmark, PhD, Associate Principal Scientist, Drug Discovery, AstraZeneca R&D
Panelists:
Pamela A. Williams, PhD, Director, Astex Pharmaceuticals
Paolo Di Fruscia, PhD, Senior Research Scientist, Medicinal Chemistry, AstraZeneca
Micah Steffek, MSc, Senior Principal Scientific Researcher, Biochemical & Cellular Pharmacology, Genentech Inc.
Michael Raba, Dr., Deputy Head, Biophysics and Screening, Crelux, Research Service Division, WuXi AppTec
4:30 pm Drug Discovery Chemistry Connects - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

Explore new products and services in our Exhibit Hall, engage with poster presenters, schedule 1-on-1 meetings, and build your research community during this open networking period.

5:00 pm Close of Day

Wednesday, May 19

9:30 am Interactive Breakout Discussions - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

This group discussion is a chance for everyone to see and hear each other if they choose to turn on their cameras and microphones. Each group will have a moderator to ensure focused conversations around key issues within the conference's scope. This will be a 'now or never' session; it will not be recorded or available On Demand. View all topics on breakouts webpage.

Topic: New Horizons in FBDD

Daniel A. Erlanson, PhD, Vice President, Chemistry, Frontier Medicines Corp.
Huifen Chen, PhD, Senior Principal Scientist, Discovery Chemistry, Genentech
  • Covalent fragments
  • FBDD without structural information
  • Integrating FBDD with HTS, DEL, and other approaches​

FRAGMENT-ORIGIN COMPOUNDS

10:00 am

Fragment-Based Discovery of Novel Non-Hydroxamate LpxC Inhibitors with Antibacterial Activity

Roderick E. Hubbard, PhD, Senior Fellow, Vernalis R&D, Ltd.

LpxC catalyzes the first committed step in the biosynthesis of Lipid A, an essential component of the cell envelope of Gram-negative bacteria. In collaboration with colleagues at Taisho Pharmaceuticals, we have identified two series of compounds derived from fragments with differing modes of zinc chelation. Structure-guided design led to a compound exhibiting low nanomolar inhibition of LpxC and a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 4 µg/mL against Pseudomonas aeruginosa.    

10:30 am

Utilization of a Fragment-based Approach in the Development of Orally Efficacious TNFα Inhibitors

Justin Dietrich, PhD, Principal Research Scientist I, Fragment Based Drug Discovery and DNA-Encoded Library Technologies, AbbVie

Inhibition of TNFα and other cytokine signaling pathways such as IL-17, IL-23, and IL-6 have been clinically validated via macromolecular biologic drugs; however, efforts to modulate these pathways with small molecules by directly inhibiting interaction with their cognate receptors have been impeded by the challenges associated with the requirements of a small molecule to disrupt high-affinity, protein-protein interactions.  Here, we will present a fragment-based approach and some lessons we have learned in the development of orally efficacious TNFα inhibitors that can be more broadly applied to identify starting points for other cytokines of interest.


11:00 am

Mimicking Nature in Drug Discovery: Enabling Good Design from Fragments to Macrocycles

Robert J. Young, PhD, Principal, Blue Burgundy Drug Discovery Consulting; formerly GSK Fellow and Scientific Leader, Medicinal Chemistry

Drug Discovery is a discipline of compromises to achieve efficacy and safety with drug molecules. The balancing of properties required to enable passage across biological membranes is considered in the context of debates over the mechanism of crossing membranes, be this via the bilayer or carrier proteins. In particular, the evolutionary consequences of the latter are explored, suggesting opportunities for better biomimetic designs in molecules large and small.

Trevor Askwith, PhD, Group Leader Assay Biology, Domainex Ltd

Being able to test newly synthesized molecules is a pivotal part of early-stage drug discovery, with the data from assays driving decisions on the next molecules to be developed. The waveRAPID technology enables testing of full kinetic parameters for up to 400 compound fragments unattended in a 24-hour period. We present how Domainex are using waveRAPID to accelerate the analogue expansion to support our fragment and virtual screening hit ID platforms.

12:10 pm LIVE:

Panel Q&A with Session Speakers

Panel Moderator:
Joe Patel, PhD, Vice President, Structural Biology, Treeline Biosciences
Panelists:
Roderick E. Hubbard, PhD, Senior Fellow, Vernalis R&D, Ltd.
Justin Dietrich, PhD, Principal Research Scientist I, Fragment Based Drug Discovery and DNA-Encoded Library Technologies, AbbVie
Robert J. Young, PhD, Principal, Blue Burgundy Drug Discovery Consulting; formerly GSK Fellow and Scientific Leader, Medicinal Chemistry
Trevor Askwith, PhD, Group Leader Assay Biology, Domainex Ltd
12:40 pm Women in Chemistry Breakout Discussion - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

CHI supports and promotes diversity in the life sciences. The inequities that prevent women from fully participating in this field may also deter men from participating more fully in life outside of their careers. We dedicate this session for all drug discovery community members to engage in conversation with one another around personal and professional journeys and challenges related to gender. View full info on breakouts webpage.

Women in Chemistry: The Gender Divide in Life Science Careers 

Moderator: Mary Harner, PhD, Senior Manager, Oncology CI, Bristol Myers Squibb Co.
1:10 pm Greet ’n’ Go Hallway Networker with Speakers and Poster Presenters - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
1:30 pm Close of Fragment-Based Drug Discovery Conference
Recommended Short Course*
SC2: Targeted Protein Degradation Using PROTACs, Molecular Glues, and More

*All Access VIRTUAL Pricing or separate registration required. See short course page for details.