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Upcoming ACS Webinars www.acs.org/acswebinars Thursday, June 2, 2016
Chemistry of Go: High Performance Elastomers Session 6 of the 2016 Material Science Series Edmund Carnahan, R&D Fellow, Performance Plastics Division, Dow Chemical Mark Jones, Executive External Strategy and Communications Fellow, Dow Chemical
Thursday, June 9, 2016
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Design of Deliverable Macrocycles Scott Lokey University of California Santa Cruz ACS Webinar, May 19, 2016 Session 5 of the 2016 Drug Design and Delivery Symposium
Scott Lokey Dr. Taha Rezai
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry Dr. Matthew Josh Cameron Chad University ofNaylor California Santa Cruz Schwochert Pye
Dr. Akihiro ”Aki” Furukawa Townsend Dr. Andy Bockus
Dr. Rushia Turner Dr. Tina (White) Doyle 15
Chemical space defined by target binding sites Druggable Space
clefts & grooves
pockets
Binding Site Surface Area Å2
diffuse protein-protein 1200 interactions
Biologics
1000 800 600 Ro5
400
Small molecules
200
0 0
Villar et al. Nature Chemical Biology 2014
500
1000 1500 Molecular Weight Mol. Wt
2000
16
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Biologics Affinity, specificity extracellular targets
Cell permeability
17
Natural product scaffolds can Druggable chemical space inform Druggable designSpace in bRo5 space
Binding Site Surface Area Å2
1200
Biologics
Protein-Protein Interactions
1000 800
bRo5
macrocycles/ natural products
600 Ro5
400
Small Molecules
200
0 0
500
1000 1500 Molecular Weight
Villar et al. Nature Chemical Biology 2014
2000 18
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Compounds that emerge from DNA-encoded libraries often lack cell permeability
mRNA display libraries
DNA-templated libraries Phage-encoded bicyclic peptides
• Low-nM hits, but few have low-nM activity against intracellular targets • Cyclization is generally not enough to impart favorable permeability • Split-pool approaches permute scaffold (i.e., backbone) elements, but only a small percentage of scaffolds are expected to be permeable.
Molecules 2013, 18, 3502-3528 Angew.Chem.Int.Ed. 2004, 43, 4848–4870
19
Cyclic peptide natural products
Affinity, specificity
?
Cell permeability
20
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Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
How does the MW distribution of cyclic peptide natural products compare to the MW distribution of FDA approved drugs? • They overlap • They mostly overlap, although the natural products are skewed toward higher MW
• They barely overlap because the natural products are skewed so far toward higher MW
21
Cyclic peptide NPs vs. FDA-approved drugs 0.35
FDA-approved drugs (n = 6500)
frequency
0.3 0.25 0.2 0.15
cyclic peptide NPs (n = 2387)
0.1 0.05 0 0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
MW 22
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Cell permeable cyclic peptide natural products: scaffold diversity polycyclic
SCBB H-bonding
aureobasidin
salinamide
cyclodehydration
argyrin
N-methylation
g-amino acids
HUN-7293/cotransins
b-branching
depsipeptides
didemnin B
lariat structures
cyclomarins
Bockus & Lokey Curr Top Med Chem 13, 821-836 (2013).
23
1-NMe3 GlaxoSmithKline
Univ. Queensland/Pfizer
Thansandote, P. et al. Bioorg. Med. Chem. 23, 322-327 (2015).
Wang, C.K. et al. PNAS 111, p. 17504 (2014).
Univ. Queensland/Pfizer
Univ. Queensland/Pfizer
Wang, et al, Eur. J. Med. Chem. 97, p. 202
Nielsen, et al., ChemBioChem (2015)
MedImmune/UCSC
Novartis Lewis, I. et al. Int. J. Pept. Res. Ther., 1573-3149 (2014).
Pe = 4.9 x 10-6 cm/s (MDCK cells) F = 28% (rat)
Nat. Chem. Biol. 7, (2011) 810-817
Hewitt, W.M. et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 137, 715-721 (2015).
24
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Non-alpha backbone residues
didemnin B
Dr. Andrew Bockus
1NMe3 25
Stereochemistry affects physicochemical properties
1
4 %F (rat) = 21%
Cpd
PAMPA Pe (x 10-6 cm/s)
MDCK Papp (x 10-6 cm/s)
Solubility (uM)
HLM Clearance (ug/min/mg)
eLogD
1
1
0.8
200
188
6.0
4
7
7.7
600
30
6.9
5
2
1.4
600
31
6.1
6
20
9.0
200
290
6.3
1NMe3
10
4.9
6.4
110
-
5
Bockus, A. T., et al. J. Med. Chem. 2015, 58, p 4581
6
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Hydrogen bonding and passive permeability
4
1 3 H-bonds Pe = 1 x 10-6 cm/s
5
4 H-bonds Pe = 7 x 10-6 cm/s
6
2 H-bonds Pe = 2 x 10-6 cm/s 4 H-bonds Pe = 20 x 10-6 cm/s
27
Effect of side chain variation
Josh Schwochert
Dr. Akihiro ”Aki” Furukawa
Chad Townsend
28
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Effect of side chain variation
R4
R3
O
Me N
N H O N
R4
R2
O
N O
O N
H N
R2 O
R3
Sub-01
Sub-02
Sub-03
Sub-04
Sub-05
Sub-06
Sub-07
Sub-08
Sub-09
Sub-10
29
30
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Side chain effects: steric shielding and conformation Dr. William Hewitt
Hewitt et al. JACS (2015)
31
Side chain effects: steric shielding and conformation Dr. William Hewitt
Hewitt et al. JACS (2015)
32
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Side chain effects: steric shielding and conformation
Hewitt et al. JACS (2015)
33
Side chain effects: steric shielding and conformation
Hewitt et al. JACS 2014, 137, p. 715
34
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Side chain effects: steric shielding and conformation
Hewitt et al. JACS 2014, 137, p. 715
35
Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
How would you expect a single Isoleucine-to-Leucine substitution to affect the aqueous solubility of this cyclic peptide? Ile
Leu
36
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5/19/2016
Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
How would you expect a single Isoleucine-to-Leucine substitution to affect the aqueous solubility of this cyclic peptide? • No effect • A small but measurable effect due to the subtle lipophilicity difference between Ile and Leu • A large increase: The Leu compound should be significantly more soluble than the Ile compound • A large decrease: The Leu compound should be significantly less soluble than the Ile compound 37
Side chain branching has dramatic effect on aqueous solubility steric clash
H N
H N
O
H N
(side chain)
O
f/y rotation O H N
O
(backbone)
H N
c-rotation O
X
O
H N
not sampled
O H N
(side chain)
H N
H N
O
c-rotation
O
f/y rotation O
(backbone)
H N
O H N
Caco-2: 14 x 10-6 cm/s Aq. Sol: 8 µM
O
H N
favored in chloroform
Caco-2: 19 x 10-6 cm/s Aq. Sol: 111 µM
favored in water
Bockus et al. J. Med. Chem. 2015, 58, p. 7409
38
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5/19/2016
Addressing the size limit… 1NMe3 vs. CSA
CSA
MW = 1202
1NMe3
MW = 755 MW ~ 1000, F = 100% (rat) Fouché, et al., ChemMedChem 2016, 11, 1 – 13 (Novartis)
39
Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
The molecular weight (or size) “ceiling” for achieving passive membrane permeability relates to? • The free energy associated with forming cavities in the membrane • Opposition to the lateral pressure inside the ordered “barrier domain” at the center of the bilayer • The radius-dependent (i.e., Stokes-Einstein) diffusion of a solute through a viscous medium • All of the above • None of the above 40
20
5/19/2016
Full lipophilicity scan library on 8, 9, 10-mers
X=
bRo5
Cameron Pye Nle
Abu
Nva
Ala
41
nona
octa
deca
Pe(10 -6 cm/s)
PAMPA permeability vs. AlogP
6 5 4 3 2 1 0
octa nona deca 0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
AlogP 42
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5/19/2016
logP0
Intrinsic permeability corrected for solubility
Octapeptides
1
-4.5 logPe
octa
0.6
-6.5 -7.5
0.4
-8.5
0.2
-9.5
Solubility
0.8
-5.5
0 -3
-2
-1
0 logK
1
2
3
43
𝑃0 =
𝐾ℎ𝑐/𝑤 𝐷 𝛿
0
𝑃0 𝐿𝑜𝑔 = 𝑳𝒐𝒈𝑫 𝛿𝐾ℎ𝑐/𝑤
𝐷=
LogD (cm2/s)
-2
𝑘𝑇 6𝜋𝜂𝑟
-4 -6 -8 -10 -12 6
8
10
12
Mol. Radius (or V 0.33) (Å) 44
22
5/19/2016
𝑃0 =
0
𝑃0 = 𝑳𝒐𝒈𝑫 𝛿𝐾ℎ𝑐/𝑤
-2
LogD (cm2/s)
𝐿𝑜𝑔
𝐾ℎ𝑐/𝑤 𝐷 𝛿
[CELLRANGE] [CELLRANGE] [CELLRANGE]
-4
[CELLRANGE]
-6
[CELLRANGE]
[CELLRANGE]
[CELLRANGE]
-8
[CELLRANGE] [CELLRANGE]
-10 -12 6
8
10
12
Mol. Radius (or V 0.33) (Å) 45
Conclusions 1. Scaffolds can achieve permeability by adopting non-polar conformations. This phenomenon does not always correlate with intramolecular hydrogen bonding, but often it does.
vs. steric clash O
f/y rotation
H N
O
polycyclic O
(backbone) SCBB H-bonding
X
H N
O
not sampled
depsipeptides
lariat structures
3. Side chains can impact permeability c-rotation and solubility in both simple and (side chain) O complex ways, through effects on H O N overall lipophilicity as well as more favored in chloroform subtle conformational effects.
H N
b-branching
cyclodehydration
N-methylation
g-amino acids
f/y rotation (backbone)
H N
H N
O H N
O
O H N
H N
2. Excellent permeability can Obe H N achieved in compounds with novel natural and synthetic backbone elements.
(side chain)
H N
c-rotation O
desolvation energy
IMHB
O
H N
0
-2
Vumon Digoxin Xifaxan
-4
4. The impact of MW remains a mystery.
-6
favored in water
scytalidamide cordyheptapep tin B
1NMe3
CSA_Bmt2Leu
-8
stylissamide G cylindrocyclin
-10 -12 6
8
10
Mol. Radius (or V 0.33) (Å)
12
46
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5/19/2016
Acknowledgements
UCSC
Prof. Matt Jacobson (UCSF)
Other lab members
Rushia Turner
Walter Bray
Will Hewitt
Dustin Wride
Victoria Klein
Tannia Lau
Spiros Liras David Price Alan Mathiowetz
Akihiro ”Aki” Furukawa Dr. Tohru Takahashi Dr. Takeshi Honda
Matthew Naylor Maria Blanco Prashant Desai Isabel Gonzalez Jaclyn Barrett
David Earp, Matthew Jacobson, Siegfried Leung, Pablo Garcia, Mahesh Ramanaseshan Cayla McEwen
Joshua Schwochert Maria Bednarek
Cameron Pye Lauren Goodrich Thomas Albert Jigar Patel Eric Sullivan Victor Lyamichev
47
2016 Drug Design and Delivery Symposium “Design of Deliverable Macrocycles”
Scott Lokey
Nick Meanwell
Professor, University of California, Santa Cruz and Director, UCSC Chemical Screening Center
Executive Director, Discovery Chemistry, Bristol-Myers Squibb
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to ACS members after one week
www.acs.org/acswebinars The 2016 DDDS is co-produced with ACS Division of Medicinal Chemistry and the AAPS
48
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2016 Drug Design and Delivery Symposium
http://bit.ly/2016ddds
49
®
Upcoming ACS Webinars www.acs.org/acswebinars Thursday, June 2, 2016
Chemistry of Go: High Performance Elastomers Session 6 of the 2016 Material Science Series Edmund Carnahan, R&D Fellow, Performance Plastics Division, Dow Chemical Mark Jones, Executive External Strategy and Communications Fellow, Dow Chemical
Thursday, June 9, 2016
Ice Cream Chemistry Rich Hartel, Professor of Food Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison Maya Warren, Food Scientist, Cold Stone Creamery
Contact ACS Webinars ® at
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5/19/2016
2016 Drug Design and Delivery Symposium “Design of Deliverable Macrocycles”
Scott Lokey
Nick Meanwell
Professor, University of California, Santa Cruz and Director, UCSC Chemical Screening Center
Executive Director, Discovery Chemistry, Bristol-Myers Squibb
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to ACS members after one week
www.acs.org/acswebinars
Information
The 2016 DDDS is co-produced with ACS Division of Medicinal Chemistry and the AAPS
Candidate Knowledge
Compounds
Development
Candidate Molecule
1 1000’s
Adapted from: A. Bak AAPS Newsmagazine July 2014
Find out more at: https://www.aaps.org/DDDI/
51
DDDI provides a collaborative and interactive forum for academic, industrial and regulatory scientists focused on issues at the discovery/development interface to improve the discovery, optimization, and successful transitioning of preclinical candidates into clinical development
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Join the ACS Division of Medicinal Chemistry Today!
For $25 ($10 for students), You Will Receive: • A free copy of our annual medicinal chemistry review volume (over 600 pages, $160 retail price) • Abstracts of MEDI programming at national meetings • Access to student travel grants and fellowships Find out more about the ACS MEDI Division! www.acsmedchem.org
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®
“I really appreciated the insight into the mind of current leaders in medicinal chemistry, particularly the encouragement to gain experience in a variety of areas with the focus on working on scientific challenges. It helps to remove limitations I'd placed on myself based on my areas of synthetic experience.” Quote in reference to: http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/acswebinars/drug-discovery/drug-career.html
Crystal O’Neil, Scientist, Chemist, Research and Development
Be a featured fan on an upcoming webinar! Write to us @
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facebook.com/acswebinars @acswebinars youtube.com/acswebinars
Search for “acswebinars” and connect! 55
Benefits of ACS Membership Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN) The preeminent weekly news source.
NEW! Free Access to ACS Presentations on Demand® ACS Member only access to over 1,000 presentation recordings from recent ACS meetings and select events.
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ACS Webinars does not endorse any products or services. The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the American Chemical Society.
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®
Upcoming ACS Webinars www.acs.org/acswebinars Thursday, June 2, 2016
Chemistry of Go: High Performance Elastomers Session 6 of the 2016 Material Science Series Edmund Carnahan, R&D Fellow, Performance Plastics Division, Dow Chemical Mark Jones, Executive External Strategy and Communications Fellow, Dow Chemical
Thursday, June 9, 2016
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Contact ACS Webinars ® at
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