Docking and Linking
of Fragments To Discover Jumonji
Histone Demethylase Inhibitors
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Posted on 2016-02-19 - 15:38
Development
of tool molecules that inhibit Jumonji demethylases
allows for the investigation of cancer-associated transcription. While
scaffolds such as 2,4-pyridinedicarboxylic acid (2,4-PDCA) are
potent inhibitors, they exhibit limited selectivity. To discover new
inhibitors for the KDM4 demethylases, enzymes overexpressed in several
cancers, we docked a library of 600 000 fragments into the
high-resolution structure of KDM4A. Among the most interesting chemotypes
were the 5-aminosalicylates, which docked in two distinct but overlapping
orientations. Docking poses informed the design of covalently linked
fragment compounds, which were further derivatized. This combined
approach improved affinity by ∼3 log-orders to yield compound 35 (Ki = 43 nM). Several hybrid
inhibitors were selective for KDM4C over the related enzymes FIH,
KDM2A, and KDM6B while lacking selectivity against the KDM3 and KDM5
subfamilies. Cocrystal structures corroborated the docking predictions.
This study extends the use of structure-based docking from fragment
discovery to fragment linking optimization, yielding novel KDM4 inhibitors.
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Korczynska, Magdalena; Le, Daniel D.; Younger, Noah; Gregori-Puigjané, Elisabet; Tumber, Anthony; Krojer, Tobias; et al. (2016). Docking and Linking
of Fragments To Discover Jumonji
Histone Demethylase Inhibitors. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b01527