Discovery of β2 Adrenergic Receptor Ligands Using Biosensor Fragment Screening of Tagged Wild-Type Receptor

Tonia Aristotelous(University of Dundee), Seungkirl Ahn(Duke University Hospital), Arun K. Shukla(Duke Medical Center), Sylwia Gawron(University of Dundee), Maria F. Sassano(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Alem W. Kahsai(Duke Medical Center), Laura M. Wingler(Duke Medical Center), Xiao Zhu(Duke Medical Center), Prachi Tripathi‐Shukla(Duke Medical Center), Xi‐Ping Huang(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jennifer Riley(University of Dundee), Jérémy Besnard(University of Dundee), Kevin D. Read(University of Dundee), Bryan L. Roth(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Ian H. Gilbert(University of Dundee), Andrew L. Hopkins(University of Dundee), Robert J. Lefkowitz(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Iva Navrátilová(University of Dundee)
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters
September 3, 2013
Cited by 65Open Access
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Abstract

G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the primary target class of currently marketed drugs, accounting for about a quarter of all drug targets of approved medicines. However, almost all the screening efforts for novel ligand discovery rely exclusively on cellular systems overexpressing the receptors. An alternative ligand discovery strategy is a fragment-based drug discovery, where low molecular weight compounds, known as fragments, are screened as initial starting points for optimization. However, the screening of fragment libraries usually employs biophysical screening methods, and as such, it has not been routinely applied to membrane proteins. We present here a surface plasmon resonance biosensor approach that enables, cell-free, label-free, fragment screening that directly measures fragment interactions with wild-type GPCRs. We exemplify the method by the discovery of novel, selective, high affinity antagonists of human β2 adrenoceptor.


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