Le Jeudi 26 Avril 2018 16:50 CEST, WENHE ZHONG <wenhezhong.xmu....@gmail.com> a 
écrit:

Just to be sure: how was the nM affinity evaluated ? By in vitro measurements, 
or by obtaining an IC50 by tests on cells ?
Of course, if you are mentioning an IC50, you may have a measurement of the 
efficacy of drug entrance in the cells, not just of specific binding to your 
protein target.
Philippe D.

> Dear Community,
>
> A little bit out of topic here. We are applying the structure-based approach 
> to design compounds that can bind our protein target. We have synthesized a 
> series of analogues based on the same scaffold with different substituents at 
> one particular site. The most potent analogue (nM Kd) has a long alkyl chain 
> substituent. We thought this hydrophobic substituent should have strong 
> interactions with the target protein leading to nM range affinity. However, 
> crystal structures show very weak densities for this substituent and no 
> obvious interaction between the substituent and the target protein, 
> suggesting that this long alkyl chain substituent is flexible without binding 
> to the protein. This binding site is relatively negative charged according to 
> the electrostatic potential analysis.
>
> So it is a puzzle to me that how this dynamic and hydrophobic alkyl chain 
> substituent can lead the compound to achieve nM affinity (>10-fold better 
> than any other substituent) — in particular the binding site is not 
> hydrophobic and no interaction is found between the substituent and the 
> protein.
>
> Anything I have miss here that can increase the binding affinity without 
> interacting with the target?
>
> Thanks.
>
> Kind regards,
> Wenhe
>
>
>




Reply via email to