In silico fragment-based discovery of CIB1-directed anti-tumor agents by FRASE-bot.
Yi AnJiwoong LimMarta GlavatskikhXiaowen WangJacqueline Norris-DrouinP Brian HardyTina M LeisnerKenneth H PearceDmitri B KireevPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Chemical probes are an indispensable tool for translating biological discoveries into new therapies, though are increasingly difficult to identify since novel therapeutic targets are often hard-to-drug proteins. We introduce FRASE-based hit-finding robot (FRASE-bot), to expedite drug discovery for unconventional therapeutic targets. FRASE-bot mines available 3D structures of ligand-protein complexes to create a database of FRAgments in Structural Environments (FRASE). The FRASE database can be screened to identify structural environments similar to those in the target protein and seed the target structure with relevant ligand fragments. A neural network model is used to retain fragments with the highest likelihood of being native binders. The seeded fragments then inform ultra-large-scale virtual screening of commercially available compounds. We apply FRASE-bot to identify ligands for Calcium and Integrin Binding protein 1 (CIB1), a promising drug target implicated in triple negative breast cancer. FRASE-based virtual screening identifies a small-molecule CIB1 ligand (with binding confirmed in a TR-FRET assay) showing specific cell-killing activity in CIB1-dependent cancer cells, but not in CIB1-depletion-insensitive cells.
Keyphrases
- small molecule
- binding protein
- protein protein
- drug discovery
- neural network
- adverse drug
- high resolution
- induced apoptosis
- high throughput
- single molecule
- living cells
- genome wide
- molecular docking
- cell cycle arrest
- gene expression
- bone marrow
- cell death
- drug induced
- fluorescence imaging
- energy transfer
- mesenchymal stem cells
- quantum dots