Quantifying Cooperativity Through Binding Free Energies in Molecular Glue Degraders

28 October 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Molecular glues represent a novel therapeutic modality facilitating the stabilization of protein-protein interactions (PPIs), thus enabling the targeting of previously 'undruggable' proteins. We rigorously study the cooperative binding mechanisms of molecular glue degraders, specifically cereblon (CRBN) modulators targeting Ikaros family zinc finger 2 (IKZF2), a transcription factor implicated in cancer immunotherapy. We present a comprehensive computational protocol for screening large molecular libraries to identify potent molecular glues. By leveraging cooperative binding principles in ternary complex formation, our approach effectively predicts ligand-induced PPIs and their degradation potential. Benchmarking against experimental data for CRBN-Ikaros complexes, our protocol demonstrates high accuracy in identifying superior molecular glues, highlighting L4 and L5 as top performers. Furthermore, our high-throughput screening identified novel candidates from extensive chemical libraries, validated through advanced free energy perturbation (FEP+) simulations. This study not only underscores the transformative potential of molecular glues in targeted protein degradation but also sets the stage for their broader application across diverse protein targets, paving the way for innovative therapeutic strategies in drug discovery.

Keywords

Molecular glue degraders
Cooperativity effect
Ternary complex formation
Glueability
Free energy perturbation
Virtual screening of glues
Molecular dynamics

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