Application Notes

Proximity Inducers in Drug Discovery - A Perspective on Cooperativity

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4 A P P L I C A T I O N N O T E "I see the chaperone agnostic approach as more viable, especially for addressing difficult targets, where the only way of modulating them is their involvement into a ternary complex" - Dr. Hans-Jörg Roth THE IMPORTANCE OF COOPERATIVITY IN DRUG DESIGN Hans-Jörg also underscores the critical role of cooperativity for proximity-inducing drugs. In classic drug discovery, high affinity and therefore high specificity for a given target was o en achieved by increasing the size of the molecule, and thereby the number of molecular interactions with the protein. "Cooperativity plays a key role in ensuring that the molecular weight of the compound can be kept low," Hans-Jörg notes. This is important because smaller compounds tend to have fewer side effects compared to larger bifunctional molecules. A high cooperativity means that the chaperone and the target form many stabilizing interactions that occur only in the ternary complex, leading to higher potency. However, rationally designing for high cooperativity requires the availability of a 3D-model, ideally coming from an X-ray or NMR structure of the ternary complex. Even then it remains challenging. Hans-Jörg observes that computational methods are emerging, which — crucially for the rational improvement of cooperativity — can handle the more complex molecular dynamics of ternary complexes, as opposed to binary ligand-protein complexes. U S E R C A S E S T U D Y

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