Structure-Based Design
Technology Contour and Its
Application to the Design of Renin Inhibitors
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Abstract
It is well-known that the structure-based design approach
has had
a measurable impact on the drug discovery process in identifying novel
and efficacious therapeutic agents for a variety of disease targets.
The de novo design approach has inherent potential to generate novel
molecules that best fit into a protein binding site when compared
to all of the computational methods applied to structure-based design.
In its initial attempts, this approach did not achieve much success
due to technical hurdles. More recently, the algorithmic advancements
in the methodologies and clever strategies developed to design drug-like
molecules have improved the success rate. We describe a state-of-the-art
structure-based design technology called Contour and provide details
of the algorithmic enhancements we have implemented. Contour was designed
to create novel drug-like molecules by assembling synthetically viable
fragments in the protein binding site using a high-resolution crystal
structure of the protein. The technology consists of a sophisticated
growth algorithm and a novel scoring function based on a directional
model. The growth algorithm generates molecules by dynamically selecting
only those fragments from the fragment library that are complementary
to the binding site, and assembling them by sampling the conformational
space for each attached fragment. The scoring function embodying the
essential elements of the binding interactions aids in the rank ordering
of grown molecules and helps identify those that have high probability
of exhibiting activity against the protein target of interest. The
application of Contour to identify inhibitors against human renin
enzyme eventually leading to the clinical candidate VTP-27,999 will
be discussed here