posted on 2023-07-24, 19:37authored byHannah
M. Baumann, Eric Dybeck, Christopher L. McClendon, Frank C. Pickard, Vytautas Gapsys, Laura Pérez-Benito, David F. Hahn, Gary Tresadern, Alan M. Mathiowetz, David L. Mobley
Binding free energy calculations predict the potency
of compounds
to protein binding sites in a physically rigorous manner and see broad
application in prioritizing the synthesis of novel drug candidates.
Relative binding free energy (RBFE) calculations have emerged as an
industry-standard approach to achieve highly accurate rank-order predictions
of the potency of related compounds; however, this approach requires
that the ligands share a common scaffold and a common binding mode,
restricting the methods’ domain of applicability. This is a
critical limitation since complex modifications to the ligands, especially
core hopping, are very common in drug design. Absolute binding free
energy (ABFE) calculations are an alternate method that can be used
for ligands that are not congeneric. However, ABFE suffers from a
known problem of long convergence times due to the need to sample
additional degrees of freedom within each system, such as sampling
rearrangements necessary to open and close the binding site. Here,
we report on an alternative method for RBFE, called Separated Topologies
(SepTop), which overcomes the issues in both of the aforementioned
methods by enabling large scaffold changes between ligands with a
convergence time comparable to traditional RBFE. Instead of only mutating
atoms that vary between two ligands, this approach performs two absolute
free energy calculations at the same time in opposite directions,
one for each ligand. Defining the two ligands independently allows
the comparison of the binding of diverse ligands without the artificial
constraints of identical poses or a suitable atom–atom mapping.
This approach also avoids the need to sample the unbound state of
the protein, making it more efficient than absolute binding free energy
calculations. Here, we introduce an implementation of SepTop. We developed
a general and efficient protocol for running SepTop, and we demonstrated
the method on four diverse, pharmaceutically relevant systems. We
report the performance of the method, as well as our practical insights
into the strengths, weaknesses, and challenges of applying this method
in an industrial drug design setting. We find that the accuracy of
the approach is sufficiently high to rank order ligands with an accuracy
comparable to traditional RBFE calculations while maintaining the
additional flexibility of SepTop.