A Virtual High-throughput Screening Pipeline for Covalent Inhibitors

August 09, 2021
Events, ACS2021

At the American Chemical Society Fall 2021 National Meeting & Expo, Atomwise members were selected to present their research and work. Learn what our Atoms have been working on below and visit Atomwise at ACS Fall 2021 National Meeting for other presentation sessions. 


 

srimuhk-prasad-phdSrimukh Prasad, PhD 
Atomwise

Atomwise Co-Authors: Adrian F. Morrison, Pawel Gniewek, Saulo de Oliveira, Venkatesh Mysore, Henry van den Bedem

Title: A Virtual High-throughput Screening Pipeline for Covalent Inhibitors

Division: Computers in Chemistry

View Presentation

ACS_fall_2021_Srimukh_081921

 


Abstract

Covalent inhibitors can provide opportunities to modulate protein function with greater potency, selectivity, and duration than their non-covalent counterparts, but they are often shunned in drug discovery campaigns due to concerns surrounding off-target toxicity. The approval of multiple covalent drugs by the FDA in the last decade has prompted a resurgence of interest in this class of compounds. However, introducing covalent compounds in structure-based, deep-learning virtual high-throughput screening (vHTS) pipelines for ultra-large libraries with billions of compounds leads to new challenges. For example, the model needs to automatically detect chemical groups on the target protein and compound that can react covalently and generate correct docking poses. As the properties of decoy compounds need to closely match those of actives and as negative data for this problem is scarce, data-augmentation for this problem becomes extra challenging. Here, we address these challenges and present a structure-based, deep learning vHTS pipeline for covalent compounds. We use RDKit to detect covalent warheads based on a precompiled list of SMARTS patterns and identify electrophilic residues on the protein target near the binding site. We developed a constrained docking algorithm in CUina, Atomwise’s GPU-based implementation of the Autodock Vina, to mimic the covalent compound-protein bond. The quality of the generated poses is comparable to the state-of-the-art covalent docking protocols when compared to their corresponding crystal structures. We used these new annotations and poses to train and validate a deep learning-based vHTS model to identify covalent inhibitors. We explored multiple decoy generation strategies and assessed the effect of covalent compounds in training on the models’ performance on non-covalent vHTS tasks. Our results demonstrate that non-covalent pipelines can be successfully extended to screen covalent inhibitors in an ultra high-throughput setting.

 


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