Discovery of fully synthetic FKBP12-mTOR molecular glues†
Abstract
Molecular glues are a new drug modality with the potential to engage otherwise undruggable targets. However, the rational discovery of molecular glues for desired targets is a major challenge and most known molecular glues have been discovered by serendipity. Here we present the first fully synthetic FKBP12-mTOR molecular glues, which were discovered from a FKBP-focused, target-unbiased ligand library. Our biochemical screening of >1000 in-house FKBP ligands yielded one hit that induced dimerization of FKBP12 and the FRB domain of mTOR. The crystal structure of the ternary complex revealed that the hit targeted a similar surface on the FRB domain compared to natural product rapamycin but with a radically different interaction pattern. Structure-guided optimization improved potency 500-fold, and led to compounds which initiate FKBP12-FRB complex formation in cells. Our results show that molecular glues targeting flat surfaces can be discovered by focused screening and support the use of FKBP12 as a versatile presenter protein for molecular glues.
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