Stereo- and regiodefined DNA-encoded chemical libraries enable efficient tumour-targeting applications

The encoding of chemical compounds with amplifiable DNA tags facilitates the discovery of small-molecule ligands for proteins. To investigate the impact of stereo- and regiochemistry on ligand discovery, we synthesized a DNA-encoded library of 670,752 derivatives based on 2-azido-3-iodophenylpropion...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Favalli, N, Bassi, G, Pellegrino, C, Millul, J, De Luca, R, Cazzamalli, S, Yang, S, Trenner, A, Mozaffari, NL, Myburgh, R, Moroglu, M, Conway, SJ, Sartori, AA, Manz, MG, Lerner, RA, Vogt, PK, Scheuermann, J, Neri, D
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Nature Research 2021
Description
Summary:The encoding of chemical compounds with amplifiable DNA tags facilitates the discovery of small-molecule ligands for proteins. To investigate the impact of stereo- and regiochemistry on ligand discovery, we synthesized a DNA-encoded library of 670,752 derivatives based on 2-azido-3-iodophenylpropionic acids. The library was selected against multiple proteins and yielded specific ligands. The selection fingerprints obtained for a set of protein targets of pharmaceutical relevance clearly showed the preferential enrichment of ortho-, meta- or para-regioisomers, which was experimentally verified by affinity measurements in the absence of DNA. The discovered ligands included novel selective enzyme inhibitors and binders to tumour-associated antigens, which enabled conditional chimeric antigen receptor T-cell activation and tumour targeting.