1 research outputs found
Hot-Spotting with Thermal Scanning: A Ligand- and Structure-Independent Assessment of Target Ligandability
Evaluating
the ligandability of a protein target is a key component
when defining hit-finding strategies or when prioritize among drug
targets. Computational as well as biophysical approaches based on
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) fragment screening are powerful approaches
but suffer from specific constraints that limit their usage. Here,
we demonstrate the applicability of high-throughput thermal scanning
(HTTS) as a simple and generic biophysical fragment screening method
to reproduce assessments from NMR-based screening. By applying this
method to a large set of proteins we can furthermore show that the
assessment is predictive of the success of high-throughput screening
(HTS). The few divergences for targets of low ligandability originate
from the sensitivity differences of the orthogonal biophysical methods.
We thus applied a new strategy making use of modulations in the solvent
structure to improve assay sensitivity. This novel approach enables
improved ligandability assessments in accordance with NMR-based assessments
and more importantly positions the methodology as a valuable option
for biophysical fragment screening