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Comparative Genomics: The biological Rosetta

• The keywords can be
–
–
–
–

genome structure
gene-organisation
known promoter regions
known critical amino acid residues.

• Combination of functional
modelorganism knowledge
• Structure-function
• Identify similar areas of biology
• Identify orthologous pathways (might
have different endpoints)
Example: Agro
Sequence Genome

Known “lethal” genes
from worm, drosphila

Filter for drugability”,
tractibility & novelty
Example: Extremophiles

Look for species
with interesting
phenotypes

Sequence Genome

Functional Foods
Convert Highly Energetic Monosaccharides to Dextrane
Washing Powder additives

Known lipases

Filter for
“workable”lipases
at 90º C
Clone and produce in large quantities
Drug Discovery: Design new drugs by computer ?

Problem: pipeline cost rise linear, NCE steady
Money: bypassing difficult, work on attrition
Every step requires specific computational tools
Drug Discovery: What is a drug ?

• Drugs are generally defined as molecules which
affect biological processes.
• In order to be effective, the molecule must be
present in the body at an adequate concentration
for it to act at the specific site in the body where
it can exert its effect.
• Additionally, the molecule must be safe -- that
is, metabolized and eliminated from the body
without causing injury.
• Assumption: next 50 years still a big market in
small chemical entities which can be
administered orally in form of a pill (in contrast
to antibodies) or gene therapy …
• Taxol a drug which is an unmodified natural
compound, is the exception
• Most drugs require “work” -> need for target
driven pipeline
• Humane genome is available so all target are
identified
• How to validate (within a given disease area) ?
Drug Discovery: What is a target ?

• target - a molecule (often a protein) that is instrumental
to a disease process (though not necessarily directly
involved), which may be targeted with a potential
therapeutic.
• target identification - identifying a molecule (often a
protein) that is instrumental to a disease process (though
not necessarily directly involved), with the intention of
finding a way to regulate that molecule's activity for
therapeutic purposes.
• target validation - a crucial step in the drug
development process. Following the identification of a
potential disease target, target validation verifies that a
drug that specifically acts on the target can have a
significant therapeutic benefit in the treatment of a given
disease.
Functional Genomics ?

More than running chip experiments !

Phenotypic Gap
Total # genes

Proposal to prioritize
hypothetical protein
without annotation, nice
for bioinformatics and
biologist

Number of genes

# genes with
known function

1980

1990

2000

2010
Where is optimal drug target ?

“Optimal” drug target
Predict side effect
How to correct disease state

Side effects ?
Genome-wide RNAi

RNAI vector

20.000 genes insert
library

bacteria producing ds RNA for
each of the 20.000 genes

proprietary nematode
responding to RNAi
20.000 responses
Type-II Diabetes
Normal insulin signaling

fat storage LOW

Reduced insulin signaling

fat storage HIGH
Industrialized knock-downs
proprietary C.elegans strains
• sensitized to silencing
• sensitized to relevant pathway

20,000 bacteria
each containing
selected
C. elegans gene

select genes with desired phenotypes
Pharma is conservative
Structural Genomics

Molecular functions of 26 383 human genes
Lipinsky for the target ?

Database of all “drugable” human genes
Drug Discovery: Design new drugs by computer ?
Drug Discovery: Screening definitions

screening - the automated examination and
testing of libraries of synthetic and/or organic
compounds and extracts to identify potential drug
leads, based on the compound's binding affinity
for a target molecule.
screening library - a large collection of
compounds with different chemical properties or
shapes, generated either by combinatorial
chemistry or some other process or by collecting
samples with interesting biological properties.

High Throughput Screening: Quick and Dirty…
from 5000 compounds per day
Drug Discovery: Screening Throughput

• At the beginning of the 1990s, when the
term "high-throughput screening" was
coined, a department of 20 would
typically be able to screen around 1.5
million samples in a year, each
researcher handling around 75,000
samples. Today, four researchers using
fully automated robotic technology can
screen 50,000 samples a day, or around
2.5 million samples each year.
Drug Discovery: HTS – The Wet Lab

Distribution
96 / 384 wells

Read-out
Fluorescence /
luminescence

Robotic arm

Optical Bank
for stability
Drug Discovery: Chemistry Sources

• Available molecules collections from pharma,
chemical and agro industry, also from
academics (Eastern Europe)
• Natural products from fungi, algae, exotic
plants, Chinese and ethnobotanic medicines
• Combinatorial chemistry: it is the generation
of large numbers of diverse chemical
compounds (a library) for use in screening
assays against disease target molecules.
• Computer drug design (from model
substrates or X-ray structure)
Drug Discovery

HIT

LEAD
Drug Discovery: HIT

• initial screen established
• Compounds screened
• IC50s established
• Structures verified
• Minimum of three independent
chemical series to evaluate
• Positive in silico PK data
Drug Discovery: Hit/lead computational approaches

• When the structure of the target is unknown,
the activity data can be used to construct a
pharmacophore model for the positioning of
key features like hydrogen-bonding and
hydrophobic groups.
• Such a model can be used as a template to
select the most promising candidates from the
library.
Drug Discovery: Lead ?
•

lead compound - a potential drug candidate emerging from a
screening process of a large library of compounds.

•

It basically affects specifically a biological process.
Mechanism of activity (reversible/ irreversible, kinetics)
established

•

Its is effective at a low concentration: usually nanomolar
activity

•

It is not toxic to live cells

•

It has been shown to have some in vivo activity

•

It is chemically feasible. Specificity of key compound(s) from
each lead series against selected number of receptors/enzymes

•

Preliminary PK in vivo (rodent) to establish benchmark for in
vitro SAR

•

In vitro PK data good predictor for in vivo activity

•

Its is of course New and Original.
Lipinski: « rule of 5 »

"In the USAN set we found that the sum of Ns and Os in the molecular formula was
greater than 10 in 12% of the compounds. Eleven percent of compounds had
a MWT of over 500. Ten percent of compounds had a CLogP larger than 5 (or
an MLogP larger than 4.15) and in 8% of compounds the sum of OHs and NHs
in the chemical structure was larger than 5. The "rule of 5" states that: poor
absorption or permeation is more likely when:
A. There are less than 5 H-bond donors (expressed as the sum of OHs and
NHs);
B. The MWT is less than 500;
C. The LogP is less than 5 (or MLogP is < 4.15);
D. There are less than 10 H-bond acceptors (expressed as the sum of Ns and
Os).
Compound classes that are substrates for biological transporters are exceptions to
the rule."
Christopher A. Lipinski, Franco Lombardo, Beryl W. Dominy, Paul J. Feeney
"Experimental and computational approaches to estimate solubility and
permeability in drug discovery and development settings":
• A quick sketch with ChemDraw, conversion to a
3D structure with Chem3D, and processing by
QuikProp, reveals that the problem appears to be
poor cell permeability for this relatively polar
molecule, with predicted PCaco and PMDCK
values near 10 nm/s.
• Free alternative (Chemsketch / PreADME)
(Celebrex)
Methyl in this position makes it a weaker cox-2 inhibitor,
but site of metabolic oxidation and ensures an acceptable clearance

Drug-like-ness
To assist combinatorial chemistry, buy specific compunds
Structural Descriptors: (15 descriptors)
Molecular Formula, Molecular Weight, Formal Charge, The Number of Rotatable Bonds, The Number of Rigid
Bonds, The Number of Rings, The Number of Aromatic Rings, The Number of H Bond Acceptors, The
Number of H Bond Donors, The Number of (+) Charged Groups, The Number of (-) Charged Groups, No.
single, double, triple, aromatic bonds
Topological Descriptors:(350 descriptors)
•
Topological descriptors on the adjustancy and distance matrix
•
Count descriptors
•
Kier & Hall molecular connectivity Indices
•
Kier Shape Indices
•
Galvez topological charge Indices
•
Narumi topological index
•
Autocorrelation descriptor of atomic masses, atomic polarizability, Pauling electronegativity and van der
Waals radius
•
Information content descriptors
•
Electrotopological state index (E-state)
•
Atomic-Level-Based AI topological descriptors
Physicochemical Descriptor:(10 descriptors)
AlogP98 (calculated logP), SKlogP (calculated logP), SKlogS in pure water (calculated water solubility), SKlogS in
buffer system (calculated water solubility),SK vap (calculated vapor pressure), SK bp (calculated boiling
point), SK mp (calculated meling point), AMR (calculated molecular refractivity), APOL(calculated
polarizability), Water Solvation Free Energy
Geometrical Descriptor:(9 descriptors)
Topological Polar Surface Area, 2D van der Waals Volume, 2D van der Waals Surface Area, 2D van der Waals
Hydrophobic Surface Area, 2D van der Waals Polar Surface Area, 2D van der Waals H-bond Acceptor Surface
Area, 2D van der Waals H-bond Donor Surface Area, 2D van der Waals (+) Charged Groups Surface Area, 2D
van der Waals (-) Charged Groups Surface Area
Drug Discovery: Hit/lead computational approaches

• What can you do with these descriptors ?
• Cluster entire chemical library
– Diversity set
– Focused set
Drug Discovery: Docking

• Structure is known, virtual screening -> docking
• Many different approaches
–
–
–
–

DOCK
FlexX
Glide
GOLD

• Including conformational sampling of the ligand
• Problem:
– host flexibility
– solvatation

• Example: Bissantz et al.
– Hit rate of 10% for single scoring function
– Up to 70% with triple scoring (bagging)
Drug Discovery: De novo design / rational drug design

• Given the target site:
• Docking + structure generator
• Specialized approach: growing
substituent on a core
– LUDI
– SPROUT
– BOMB (biochemical and organic model
builder)
– SYNOPSIS

• Problem is the scoring function
which is different for every protein
class
Drug Discovery: Novel strategies using bio/cheminformatics

- HTS ? Chemical space is big (1041)
- Biased sets/focussed libraries -> bioinformatics !!!
- How ? Use phylogenetics and known structures to define
accesible (conserved) functional implicated residues to
define small molecule pharmacophores (minimal
requirements)
- Desciptor search (cheminformatics) to construct/select
biased compound set
- ensure serendipity by iterative screening of these
predesigned sets
Drug Discovery

Toxigenomics
Metabogenomics
Drug Discovery: Clinical studies

• Preclinical - An early phase of development
including initial safety assessment
Phase I - Evaluation of clinical pharmacology,
usually conducted in volunteers
Phase II - Determination of dose and initial
evaluation of efficacy, conducted in a small
number of patients
Phase III - Large comparative study
(compound versus placebo and/or established
treatment) in patients to establish clinical
benefit and safety
Phase IV - Post marketing study
Drug Discovery & Development: IND filing
Hapmap
Pharmacogenomics

Predictive/preventive – systems biology
Sneak preview
Bioinformatics (re)loaded
Sneak preview
Bioinformatics (re)loaded
• Relational datamodels
– BioSQL (MySQL)

• Data Visualisation
– Interface
• Apache
• PHP

• Large Scale Statistics
– Using R

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Bioinformatics t9-t10-bio cheminformatics-wimvancriekinge_v2013

  • 1.
  • 3. BPC
  • 4. Examen <html> <title>Examen Bioinformatica</title> <center> <head> <script> rnd.today=new Date(); rnd.seed=rnd.today.getTime(); function rnd() { rnd.seed = (rnd.seed*9301+49297) % 233280; return rnd.seed/(233280.0); }; function rand(number) { return Math.ceil(rnd()*number); }; </SCRIPT> </head> <body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00FF00" link="#00FF00"> <script language="JavaScript"> document.write('<table>'); document.write('<tr>'); document.write('<td><a href="index.html" ><img border=0 src="' + rand(713) height="360"></a></td>'); rand(98); document.write('<td><a href="index.html" ><img border=0 src="' + rand(713) height="360"></a></td>'); rand(98); document.write('<td><a href="index.html" ><img border=0 src="' + rand(713) height="360"></a></td>'); rand(98); document.write('<td><a href="index.html" ><img border=0 src="' + rand(713) height="360"></a></td>'); rand(98); + '.jpg" width="520" + '.jpg" width="520" + '.jpg" width="520" + '.jpg" width="520"
  • 5. Comparative Genomics: The biological Rosetta • The keywords can be – – – – genome structure gene-organisation known promoter regions known critical amino acid residues. • Combination of functional modelorganism knowledge • Structure-function • Identify similar areas of biology • Identify orthologous pathways (might have different endpoints)
  • 6.
  • 7. Example: Agro Sequence Genome Known “lethal” genes from worm, drosphila Filter for drugability”, tractibility & novelty
  • 8. Example: Extremophiles Look for species with interesting phenotypes Sequence Genome Functional Foods Convert Highly Energetic Monosaccharides to Dextrane Washing Powder additives Known lipases Filter for “workable”lipases at 90º C Clone and produce in large quantities
  • 9.
  • 10. Drug Discovery: Design new drugs by computer ? Problem: pipeline cost rise linear, NCE steady Money: bypassing difficult, work on attrition Every step requires specific computational tools
  • 11. Drug Discovery: What is a drug ? • Drugs are generally defined as molecules which affect biological processes. • In order to be effective, the molecule must be present in the body at an adequate concentration for it to act at the specific site in the body where it can exert its effect. • Additionally, the molecule must be safe -- that is, metabolized and eliminated from the body without causing injury. • Assumption: next 50 years still a big market in small chemical entities which can be administered orally in form of a pill (in contrast to antibodies) or gene therapy …
  • 12.
  • 13.
  • 14.
  • 15.
  • 16. • Taxol a drug which is an unmodified natural compound, is the exception • Most drugs require “work” -> need for target driven pipeline • Humane genome is available so all target are identified • How to validate (within a given disease area) ?
  • 17. Drug Discovery: What is a target ? • target - a molecule (often a protein) that is instrumental to a disease process (though not necessarily directly involved), which may be targeted with a potential therapeutic. • target identification - identifying a molecule (often a protein) that is instrumental to a disease process (though not necessarily directly involved), with the intention of finding a way to regulate that molecule's activity for therapeutic purposes. • target validation - a crucial step in the drug development process. Following the identification of a potential disease target, target validation verifies that a drug that specifically acts on the target can have a significant therapeutic benefit in the treatment of a given disease.
  • 18. Functional Genomics ? More than running chip experiments ! Phenotypic Gap Total # genes Proposal to prioritize hypothetical protein without annotation, nice for bioinformatics and biologist Number of genes # genes with known function 1980 1990 2000 2010
  • 19.
  • 20. Where is optimal drug target ? “Optimal” drug target Predict side effect How to correct disease state Side effects ?
  • 21.
  • 22.
  • 23.
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26.
  • 27. Genome-wide RNAi RNAI vector 20.000 genes insert library bacteria producing ds RNA for each of the 20.000 genes proprietary nematode responding to RNAi 20.000 responses
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30. Type-II Diabetes Normal insulin signaling fat storage LOW Reduced insulin signaling fat storage HIGH
  • 31. Industrialized knock-downs proprietary C.elegans strains • sensitized to silencing • sensitized to relevant pathway 20,000 bacteria each containing selected C. elegans gene select genes with desired phenotypes
  • 33.
  • 35.
  • 36. Lipinsky for the target ? Database of all “drugable” human genes
  • 37. Drug Discovery: Design new drugs by computer ?
  • 38. Drug Discovery: Screening definitions screening - the automated examination and testing of libraries of synthetic and/or organic compounds and extracts to identify potential drug leads, based on the compound's binding affinity for a target molecule. screening library - a large collection of compounds with different chemical properties or shapes, generated either by combinatorial chemistry or some other process or by collecting samples with interesting biological properties. High Throughput Screening: Quick and Dirty… from 5000 compounds per day
  • 39. Drug Discovery: Screening Throughput • At the beginning of the 1990s, when the term "high-throughput screening" was coined, a department of 20 would typically be able to screen around 1.5 million samples in a year, each researcher handling around 75,000 samples. Today, four researchers using fully automated robotic technology can screen 50,000 samples a day, or around 2.5 million samples each year.
  • 40. Drug Discovery: HTS – The Wet Lab Distribution 96 / 384 wells Read-out Fluorescence / luminescence Robotic arm Optical Bank for stability
  • 41. Drug Discovery: Chemistry Sources • Available molecules collections from pharma, chemical and agro industry, also from academics (Eastern Europe) • Natural products from fungi, algae, exotic plants, Chinese and ethnobotanic medicines • Combinatorial chemistry: it is the generation of large numbers of diverse chemical compounds (a library) for use in screening assays against disease target molecules. • Computer drug design (from model substrates or X-ray structure)
  • 43. Drug Discovery: HIT • initial screen established • Compounds screened • IC50s established • Structures verified • Minimum of three independent chemical series to evaluate • Positive in silico PK data
  • 44. Drug Discovery: Hit/lead computational approaches • When the structure of the target is unknown, the activity data can be used to construct a pharmacophore model for the positioning of key features like hydrogen-bonding and hydrophobic groups. • Such a model can be used as a template to select the most promising candidates from the library.
  • 45. Drug Discovery: Lead ? • lead compound - a potential drug candidate emerging from a screening process of a large library of compounds. • It basically affects specifically a biological process. Mechanism of activity (reversible/ irreversible, kinetics) established • Its is effective at a low concentration: usually nanomolar activity • It is not toxic to live cells • It has been shown to have some in vivo activity • It is chemically feasible. Specificity of key compound(s) from each lead series against selected number of receptors/enzymes • Preliminary PK in vivo (rodent) to establish benchmark for in vitro SAR • In vitro PK data good predictor for in vivo activity • Its is of course New and Original.
  • 46. Lipinski: « rule of 5 » "In the USAN set we found that the sum of Ns and Os in the molecular formula was greater than 10 in 12% of the compounds. Eleven percent of compounds had a MWT of over 500. Ten percent of compounds had a CLogP larger than 5 (or an MLogP larger than 4.15) and in 8% of compounds the sum of OHs and NHs in the chemical structure was larger than 5. The "rule of 5" states that: poor absorption or permeation is more likely when: A. There are less than 5 H-bond donors (expressed as the sum of OHs and NHs); B. The MWT is less than 500; C. The LogP is less than 5 (or MLogP is < 4.15); D. There are less than 10 H-bond acceptors (expressed as the sum of Ns and Os). Compound classes that are substrates for biological transporters are exceptions to the rule." Christopher A. Lipinski, Franco Lombardo, Beryl W. Dominy, Paul J. Feeney "Experimental and computational approaches to estimate solubility and permeability in drug discovery and development settings":
  • 47. • A quick sketch with ChemDraw, conversion to a 3D structure with Chem3D, and processing by QuikProp, reveals that the problem appears to be poor cell permeability for this relatively polar molecule, with predicted PCaco and PMDCK values near 10 nm/s. • Free alternative (Chemsketch / PreADME)
  • 48. (Celebrex) Methyl in this position makes it a weaker cox-2 inhibitor, but site of metabolic oxidation and ensures an acceptable clearance Drug-like-ness
  • 49. To assist combinatorial chemistry, buy specific compunds
  • 50.
  • 51. Structural Descriptors: (15 descriptors) Molecular Formula, Molecular Weight, Formal Charge, The Number of Rotatable Bonds, The Number of Rigid Bonds, The Number of Rings, The Number of Aromatic Rings, The Number of H Bond Acceptors, The Number of H Bond Donors, The Number of (+) Charged Groups, The Number of (-) Charged Groups, No. single, double, triple, aromatic bonds Topological Descriptors:(350 descriptors) • Topological descriptors on the adjustancy and distance matrix • Count descriptors • Kier & Hall molecular connectivity Indices • Kier Shape Indices • Galvez topological charge Indices • Narumi topological index • Autocorrelation descriptor of atomic masses, atomic polarizability, Pauling electronegativity and van der Waals radius • Information content descriptors • Electrotopological state index (E-state) • Atomic-Level-Based AI topological descriptors Physicochemical Descriptor:(10 descriptors) AlogP98 (calculated logP), SKlogP (calculated logP), SKlogS in pure water (calculated water solubility), SKlogS in buffer system (calculated water solubility),SK vap (calculated vapor pressure), SK bp (calculated boiling point), SK mp (calculated meling point), AMR (calculated molecular refractivity), APOL(calculated polarizability), Water Solvation Free Energy Geometrical Descriptor:(9 descriptors) Topological Polar Surface Area, 2D van der Waals Volume, 2D van der Waals Surface Area, 2D van der Waals Hydrophobic Surface Area, 2D van der Waals Polar Surface Area, 2D van der Waals H-bond Acceptor Surface Area, 2D van der Waals H-bond Donor Surface Area, 2D van der Waals (+) Charged Groups Surface Area, 2D van der Waals (-) Charged Groups Surface Area
  • 52. Drug Discovery: Hit/lead computational approaches • What can you do with these descriptors ? • Cluster entire chemical library – Diversity set – Focused set
  • 53. Drug Discovery: Docking • Structure is known, virtual screening -> docking • Many different approaches – – – – DOCK FlexX Glide GOLD • Including conformational sampling of the ligand • Problem: – host flexibility – solvatation • Example: Bissantz et al. – Hit rate of 10% for single scoring function – Up to 70% with triple scoring (bagging)
  • 54. Drug Discovery: De novo design / rational drug design • Given the target site: • Docking + structure generator • Specialized approach: growing substituent on a core – LUDI – SPROUT – BOMB (biochemical and organic model builder) – SYNOPSIS • Problem is the scoring function which is different for every protein class
  • 55. Drug Discovery: Novel strategies using bio/cheminformatics - HTS ? Chemical space is big (1041) - Biased sets/focussed libraries -> bioinformatics !!! - How ? Use phylogenetics and known structures to define accesible (conserved) functional implicated residues to define small molecule pharmacophores (minimal requirements) - Desciptor search (cheminformatics) to construct/select biased compound set - ensure serendipity by iterative screening of these predesigned sets
  • 57.
  • 58. Drug Discovery: Clinical studies • Preclinical - An early phase of development including initial safety assessment Phase I - Evaluation of clinical pharmacology, usually conducted in volunteers Phase II - Determination of dose and initial evaluation of efficacy, conducted in a small number of patients Phase III - Large comparative study (compound versus placebo and/or established treatment) in patients to establish clinical benefit and safety Phase IV - Post marketing study
  • 59.
  • 60.
  • 61. Drug Discovery & Development: IND filing
  • 65. Sneak preview Bioinformatics (re)loaded • Relational datamodels – BioSQL (MySQL) • Data Visualisation – Interface • Apache • PHP • Large Scale Statistics – Using R