Fragment-based screening: enabling technology for early lead generation
Modern drug discovery is difficult, expensive and inefficient. In today's
pharmaceutical research arena there is an overall need to increase the
success-rate of drug candidates, decrease the timeline of drug development and
minimize the cost of overall development. The methodology of fragment-based
screening (FBS) has been shown to address these basic problems of the drug
discovery pipeline (Nienaber et al., Nature Biotechnology 2000 18,
1105). Rigaku is uniquely positioned to satisfy the needs of users of the FBS
technique.
The concept of fragment-based screening
FBS is a validated method of searching for novel leads in the drug
discovery process, the goal of which is to rapidly convert the identified
leads into clinical candidates. In its simplest incarnation, this method
involves soaking small (100-300 Da), drug-like, organic compounds into
pre-formed protein crystals. As protein crystals are highly porous, fragments
that have an affinity for a protein will bind at its active site, while those
that do not will remain in the solvent channels. Binding at the active site is
determined using X-ray crystallography to detect difference density in the
active site. Using high-throughput crystallographic methods, a large number of
fragments can be assessed in a relatively short time; typically 10-100
compounds can be scanned in a day. The method can detect fragments with
relatively low affinity, 100 μM-10 mM. FBS is well suited to take advantage
of the improvements in automation, software and brighter X-ray sources that
have become available in recent years.
Time frames from target identification to Investigational New Drug
Application (IND) have been reported to be as short as two years using FBS,
significantly shorter than for traditional methods such as high-throughput
screening (HTS). The leads produced from FBS are, by definition, higher
quality than from HTS because they are tailored to the target active site,
have lower molecular weights, and bind more efficiently.
Fragment-based screening in practice
First,
crystals (right) of an interesting drug-target protein are grown that have
only water in the active site. The crystals are soaked in a solution
containing a mixture of small, drug-like fragments (below left). Fragments that
bind are identified by determining an X-ray structure (below right). The advantage of the method is that the experiment identifies the fragments
that bind to the protein, along with the three-dimensional detailed structure of the fragments bound to the site.
Using the structures, you can rapidly develop new,
novel inhibitors of the protein target.
Fragment-based screening with Rigaku products
FBS is a technique that needs to be fast. For crystallography to become an
integral part of early lead generation, results must be generated and passed on
to the chemists and modelers as soon as possible. Rigaku specializes in
"fast" crystallography and thus is the perfect partner to help
establish an FBS lab facility. Whether starting a lab from scratch or upgrading
an existing lab to the latest technologies, Rigaku can provide all of the
necessary hardware, consumables and expertise.
"Fast" crystallography implies automation, for crystallization,
sample changing, and structure solution, and it implies high-speed data
collection—high brilliance X-ray sources coupled with high-speed detectors.
Rigaku can supply a highly automated lab for crystal growth and visualization,
data collection, and structure solution as well as supply pre-formulated
fragment libraries.
Automated crystallization and visualization
Rigaku offers CrystalMation,
consisting of crystallization screen creation, plate setup, reservoir and
protein dispense, plate storage and handling, image inspection and scoring,
one-click optimization and software applications for experiment management,
streamlines the crystallization process and offers life science researchers a
complete solution from protein to crystal. Rigaku also offers individual
subsystems to enhance your current capabilities.
High-speed X-ray crystallography
X-ray
crystallography is integral to the successful discovery of fragment-derived lead
compounds. Crystallographic screening is a fully validated method of fragment
screening and has been routinely applied by companies such as Abbott
Laboratories, ASTEX and SGX Pharmaceuticals. Co-crystal structures with
fragments are also required for the successful optimization of fragments
detected by other techniques.
The heart of an FBS X-ray system is the new Rigaku FR-E+ SuperBright™, the
most intense home laboratory X-ray source available today for macromolecular
crystallography, providing brightness exceeding some 2nd generation bending
magnet synchrotron beamlines. Coupled with a VariMax-HF optic and a
high-sensitivity, fast-readout Saturn 944+ CCD detector, you can be assured of
having the fastest system capable of collecting high-quality data available
today.
Automated sample changer
A
high-speed crystallography system is great but for the FBS technique to really
be successful, automated sample changing is essential. ACTOR™, winner of the 2002
R&D 100 Award for technical innovation, was the world's first commercial
robotic system for automated crystal sample handling. ACTOR eliminates much of
the physical handling of protein samples by crystallographers required during
routine crystal screening and data collection. The high-throughput ACTOR system
provides automatic sample transport, orientation, and retrieval. Changing
samples as soon as data have been collected also maximizes the use of the X-ray
source. ACTOR can collect data unattended 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Summary
Fragment-based screening has become the method of choice for high-throughout,
effective lead compound discovery. Rigaku is at the forefront of this technology
and can provide ALL the tools necessary, from libraries of compounds to
crystallization to diffraction to analysis to make FBS successful for you.