Structure-Based Discovery of A2AAdenosine Receptor Ligands
Author(s) -
Jens Carlsson,
Lena S. Yoo,
Zhan-Guo Gao,
John J. Irwin,
Brian K. Shoichet,
Kenneth A. Jacobson
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of medicinal chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.01
H-Index - 261
eISSN - 1520-4804
pISSN - 0022-2623
DOI - 10.1021/jm100240h
Subject(s) - chemistry , g protein coupled receptor , adenosine receptor , drug discovery , computational biology , virtual screening , docking (animal) , affinities , stereochemistry , adenosine , ligand efficiency , chemotype , receptor , ligand (biochemistry) , biochemistry , biology , agonist , medicine , nursing , chromatography , essential oil
The recent determination of X-ray structures of pharmacologically relevant GPCRs has made these targets accessible to structure-based ligand discovery. Here we explore whether novel chemotypes may be discovered for the A(2A) adenosine receptor, based on complementarity to its recently determined structure. The A(2A) adenosine receptor signals in the periphery and the CNS, with agonists explored as anti-inflammatory drugs and antagonists explored for neurodegenerative diseases. We used molecular docking to screen a 1.4 million compound database against the X-ray structure computationally and tested 20 high-ranking, previously unknown molecules experimentally. Of these 35% showed substantial activity with affinities between 200 nM and 9 microM. For the most potent of these new inhibitors, over 50-fold specificity was observed for the A(2A) versus the related A(1) and A(3) subtypes. These high hit rates and affinities at least partly reflect the bias of commercial libraries toward GPCR-like chemotypes, an issue that we attempt to investigate quantitatively. Despite this bias, many of the most potent new ligands were novel, dissimilar from known ligands, providing new lead structures for modulation of this medically important target.
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