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Arrive early to attend Protein
Kinase Targets (June 4 - 6)
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Conference Features: |
- Keynote Presentation by Mark Murcko, Ph.D.
- Pre-Conference Short Course: Designing Kinase
Inhibitors
- Cutting-Edge Scientific Sessions
- Panel Discussion:
- What Do We Mean by (Traditional)
Structure-Based Drug Design?
- Lessons to Take Home
- Case Studies & Examples of Successful
Structural Designs
- and more!
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SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY BOARD
Celerino Abad-Zapatero, Ph.D., Associate Research Fellow, Protein
Crystallography Laboratory, Abbott Laboratories
Richard A. Friesner, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry, Columbia University
Klaus Mueller, Ph.D.,Head of Science & Technology Relations,
Pharmaceutical Research,
F. Hoffmann-La Roche AG
Mark Murcko, Ph.D., Vice President & Chief Technology Officer, Scientific
Advisory Board,
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Tomi K. Sawyer, Ph.D., Senior Director, Chemical Sciences,
Pfizer Research Technology Center
pre-conference short course
Wednesday, June 6
12:00 - 1:30 pm Pre-Conference Registration
1:30 -5:15 pm PRE-CONFERENCE SHORT COURSE*
*Separate registration is required.
1:15 Structure-Guided Immune Kinase Drug Discovery
David Borhani, Ph.D., Group Leader, Department of Chemistry, Abbott
Bioresearch Center
Approaching difficult structural targets – discussed on two Ser/Thr kinases.
1:45 Design Strategies for Multiple Kinase Inhibitors
Sucha Sudarsanam, Chief Scientific Officer, Emilem Inc.
Recent clinical evidence indicates that drugs targeting multiple kinases have
proven to be effective against treatment of cancers. Using crystal structural
information of kinases and pharmacopeia of kinase inhibitors, computational
techniques have provided starting points for designing inhibitors against
individual targets. However, designing compounds that are effective against
multiple kinases has remained a challenge. In this talk, we will outline
strategies we have developed for designing inhibitors active against multiple
kinases.
2:15 TBA
2:45 Refreshment Break
3:15 Allosteric Kinase Inhibitors - Benchtop to Clinic
Christopher Larson, Ph.D., Associate Director of Biology, Kemia, Inc.
Historically, the majority of kinase inhibitor programs have focused on
compounds that target the highly conserved ATP-binding site and compete with ATP
for binding to the activated form of the kinase. In recent years, efforts have
begun to focus on compounds that bind to and stabilize an inactive conformation
of the target kinase. Kemia has been advancing several chemical series that bind
to this "allosteric" site. Targeting this conformation of kinases
offers several potential advantages in terms of selectivity, binding kinetics,
kinase activation, etc. This talk will discuss recent progress in this area as
well as characterization of Kemia's allosteric p38-alpha inhibitor, KC706,
currently in Phase 2 clinical trials.
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3:45 Kinase-Likeness as Viewed by Chemists and by Kinases
Anton Filikov, Ph.D., Principal Investigator, Informatics & Modeling,
ArQule Inc.
The in silico rapid evaluation of molecules for promising biological activity
is a rich area of research and a particularly challenging one. The
Pharmaceutical industry has long been seeking new kinase inhibitors. So at
ArQule we asked a simple question: Do kinase inhibitors carry any particular
features that differentiate them from other molecules and in particular other
drugs? Here we describe an approach to address this question that employs a
method that uses a 2D Bayesian categorization model built on a training set
obtained by docking a limited number of diverse drug-like compounds. Once these
models are built on a small set of diverse kinase structures, they not only
yield the chemical features that are particular to kinase inhibitors but also
facilitate high-throughput screening of large chemical libraries for kinase-like
compounds. This method will be compared with another technique, which involves
the building of a Bayesian categorization model on an extensive database of
known kinase inhibitors and other drug-like compounds.
4:15 Using Diverse Computational Approaches to Understand Protein/Ligand
Binding Affinities in Structure-Based Drug Design: A Cross-Docking and
Quantum Mechanical Study
Jose S. Duca, Ph.D., Senior Scientist, Computer Assisted Drug Design,
Schering Plough Research Institute
Predicting protein/ligand binding affinity is one of the most challenging
computational chemistry tasks. Numerous methods have been developed to address
this challenge, but they all have limitations. Addressing protein flexibility
has been a shortcoming of many methods. In this study, we used cross-docking of
~150 inhibitors into the full set of crystal structures for each inhibitor
complexed with the kinase CDK2. In scoring relative binding potency based on
multiple combinations of several target proteins, the dangers of over-fitting
became apparent. Examples will be given of insights gained into ligand
properties such as pKa values and relative tautomeric stabilities computed via
ab initio quantum mechanical methods. The estimation of protein/ligand binding
affinities from QM-MM calculations will also be discussed. Finally, various
methods of computing binding affinities will be assessed vis-à-vis their speed
and accuracy.
4:45 Discussion with Speakers
5:15 End of Short Course
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