Wednesday 6 December 2023

Are fused tetrahydroquinolines interfering with your assay?

I’ll be taking a look at B2023 (Fused Tetrahydroquinolines Are Interfering with Your Assay) in this post. The article has already been discussed in posts at Practical Fragments and In The Pipeline. In anticipation of the stock straw man counterarguments to my criticisms of PAINS filters, I must stress that there is absolutely no suggestion that compounds matching PAINS filters are necessarily benign. The authors have shown that fusion of cyclopentene at C3-C4 of the tetrahydroquinoline (THQ) ring system is associated with a risk of chemical instability and I consider this to be extremely useful information for anybody thinking about using this scaffold. However, the authors do also appear to be making a number of claims that are not supported by evidence and, in my view, have not demonstrated that the chemical instability leads to pan-assay interference or even frequent-hitter behavior.   

The term ‘PAINS’ crops up frequently in B2023 (the authors even refer to “the PAINS concept” although I think that’s pushing things a bit) and I’ll start by saying something about two general types of nuisance behavior of compounds in assays and these points are discussed in more detail in K2017 (Comment on The Ecstasy and Agony of Assay Interference Compounds). From the perspective of screening libraries of compounds for biological activity, the two types of nuisance behavior are very different problems that need to be considered very differently. One criticism that can be made of both BH2010 (original PAINS study) and BW2014 (Chemical con artists foil drug discovery) is that neither study considers the differing implications for drug discovery of these two types of nuisance behavior.

The first type of nuisance behavior in assays is interference with assay read-out and when ‘activity’ in an assay is due to assay interference hits can accurately be described as ‘false positives’ (this should be seen as a problem with the assay rather than the compound). Interference with assay read-outs is certainly irksome when you’re analysing output from screens because you don’t know if the ‘activity’ is real or not. However, if you’re able to demonstrate genuine activity for a compound using an assay with a read-out for which interference is not an issue then interference with other assay read-outs is irrelevant and would not rule out the compound as a viable starting point for further investigation. Interference with assay read-outs generally increases with the concentration of the compound in the assay (this is why biophysical methods are often favored for screening fragments) and I’ll direct readers to a helpful article by former colleagues. It’s also worth noting that interference with read-out can also lead to false negatives. 

The second type of nuisance behavior is that the compound acts on a target by an undesirable mechanism of action (MoA) and it is not accurate to describe hits behaving in this manner as ‘false positives’ because the effect on the target is real (this should be seen as a problem with the compound rather than the assay). In contrast to interference with read-out, an undesirable MoA is a show-stopper. An undesirable MoA with which many drug discovery scientists will be familiar is colloidal aggregate formation (see M2003) and the problem can be assessed by running the assay in the absence and presence of detergent (see FS2006). In some cases patterns in screening output may point to an undesirable MoA. For example, cysteine reactivity might be indicated by compounds hitting in multiple assays for inhibition of enzymes that use feature cysteine in their catalytic mechanisms.

I’ll make some comments on PAINS filters before I discuss B2023 in detail and much of what I’ll be saying has already been said in K2017 and C2017 (Phantom PAINS: Problems with the Utility of Alerts for Pan-Assay INterference CompoundS) although you shouldn’t need to consult these articles in order to read the blog post unless you want to get some more detail. The PAINS filter model introduced in BH2010 consists of number of substructures which are claimed (I say “claimed” because the assay results and associated chemical structures are proprietary) to be associated with frequent hitter behavior in a panel of six assays that all use the AlphaScreen read-out (compounds that react with or quench singlet oxygen have the potential of interfere with this read-out). I argued in K2017 that six assays, all using the same read-out, do not constitute a credible basis for the design of an experiment to detect pan-assay interference. Put another way, the narrow scope of the data used to train the PAINS filter model restricts the applicability domain of this model to prediction of frequent-hitter behavior in these six assays. The BH2010 study does not appear present a single example of a compound that has been actually been demonstrated by experiment to exhibit pan-assay interference.

The B2023 study reports that tetrahydroquinolines (THQs) fused at C3-C4 with cyclopentene (1) are unstable. This is valuable information for anybody who may be have the misfortune to be working with this particular scaffold and the observed instability implies that drug discovery scientists should also be extremely wary of any biological activity reported for compounds that incorporate this scaffold. Furthermore, the authors show that the instability can be linked to the presence of the carbon-carbon double bond in the ‘third ring’ since 2, the dihydro analog of 1, appears to be stable. I would certainly mention the chemical instability reported in B2023 if reviewing a manuscript that reported biological activity for compounds based on this scaffold. However, I would not mention that BH2010 has stated that the scaffold matches the anil_alk_ene (SLN: C[1]:C:C:C[4]:C(:C:@1)NCC[9]C@4C=CC@9 ) PAINS substructure because the nuisance behavior consists of hitting frequently in a six-assay panel of questionable relevance and the PAINS filters were based on analysis of proprietary data.

Although I wouldn’t have predicted the chemical instability reported for 1 by B2023, this scaffold is certainly not a structural feature that I would have taken into lead optimization with any enthusiasm (a hydrogen that is simultaneously benzylic and allylic does rather look like a free lunch for the CYPs). I would still be concerned about instability even if methylene groups were added to or deleted from the aliphatic parts of 1. I suspect that the electron-releasing nitrogen of 1 contributes to chemical instability although I don’t think that changing nitrogen for another atom type would eliminate the risk of chemical instability. Put another way, the instability observed for 1 should raise questions about the stability of a number of structurally-related scaffolds. Chemical instability is (or at least should be) a show-stopper in the context of drug discovery even if doesn't lead to interference with assay read-out, an undesirable MoA or pan-assay interference.

I certainly consider the instability observed for 1 to be of interest and relevant to a number of structurally-related chemotypes. However, I have a number of concerns about B2023 and one specific criticism is that the authors use “tricyclic/fused THQ” as a synonym throughout the text as a synonym for “tricyclic/fused THQ with a carbon-carbon double bond in the ‘third’ ring”. At best this is confusing and it could lead to groundless criticism, either publicly or in peer review, of a study that reported assay results for compounds based on the scaffold in 2A more general point is that the authors make a number of claims that, in my view, are not adequately supported by evidence. I’ll start with the significance section and my comments are italicized in red:

Tricyclic tetrahydroquinolines (THQs) are a family of lesser studied pan-assay interference compounds (PAINS) [The authors need to provide specific examples of tricyclic THQs that have been actually been shown to exhibit pan-assay interference to support this claim.] These compounds are found ubiquitously throughout commercial and academic small molecule screening libraries. [The authors do not appear to have presented evidence to support this claim and the presence of compounds in vendor catalogues does not prove that the compounds are actually being screened. In my view, the authors appear to be trying to ‘talk up’ the significance of their findings by making this statement.] Accordingly, they have been identified as hits in high-throughput screening campaigns for diverse protein targets. We demonstrate that fused THQs are reactive when stored in solution under standard laboratory conditions and caution investigators from investing additional resource into validating these nuisance compounds.

Continuing with the introduction

Fused tetrahydroquinolines (THQs) are frequent hitters in hit discovery campaigns. [In my view the authors have not presented sufficient evidence to support this statement and I don’t consider claims made in the BH2010 for frequent-hitter behavior by compounds matching the anil_alk_ene PAINS substructure to be admissible as evidence simply because they are based on proprietary data. In any case the numbers of compounds matching the anil_alk_ene PAINS substructure and reported in BH2010 to hit in zero (17) or one (11) assays in the PAINS assay panel suggest that 28 compounds (of a total of 51 substructural matches) cannot be regarded as frequent-hitters in this assay panel.]  Pan-assay interference compounds (PAINS) have been controversial in the recent literature. While some literature supports these as nuisance compounds, other papers describe PAINS as potentially valuable leads. (1 | 2 | 3 | 4) [The C2017 study referenced as 2 is actually a critique of PAINS filters and I’m assuming that the authors aren’t suggesting that it “supports these [PAINS] as nuisance compounds”. However, I would consider it a gross misrepresentation of C2017 to imply that the study describes “PAINS as potentially valuable leads”.] There have been descriptions of many different classes of PAINS that vary in their frequency of occurrence as hits in the screening literature. [In my view, the number of articles on PAINS appears to greatly exceed the number of compounds that have actually been shown to exhibit pan-assay interference.]

The number of papers that selected this scaffold during hit discovery campaigns from multiple chemical libraries supports the idea that fused THQs are frequent hitters. [Let’s take a closer look at what the authors are suggesting by considering a selection of compounds, each of which has a benzene ring in its molecular structure. Now let’s suppose that each of a large number of targets is hit by at least one of the compounds in this selection (I could easily satisfy this requirement by selecting marketed drugs with benzene rings in their molecular structures). Applying the same logic as the authors, I could use these observations to support the idea that compounds incorporating benzene rings in their molecular structures are frequent-hitters. In my view the B2023 study doesn’t appear to have presented a single example of a fused THQ that has actually been shown experimentally to exhibit frequent-hitter behavior. As mentioned earlier in this post less than half of the compounds matching the anil_alk_ene PAINS substructure that were evaluated in the BH2010 assay panel can be regarded as frequent-hitters.] At first glance, these compounds appear to be valid, optimizable hits, with reasonable physicochemical properties. Although micromolar and reproducible activity has been reported for multiple THQ analogues on many protein targets, hit-to-lead optimization programs aimed at improving the initial hits (Supporting Information (SI), Table S1) have resulted in no improvement in potency or no discernible structure–activity relationships (SAR) [Achieving increased potency and establishing SARs are certainly important objectives in hit-to-lead studies. However, assertions that hit-to-lead optimizations “have resulted in no improvement in potency or no discernible structure–activity relationships” do need to be supported with appropriate discussion of specific hit-to-lead optimization studies.]  

Examples of Fused THQs as “Hits” Are Pervasive

The diversity of protein targets captured below supports the premise that the fused THQ scaffold does not yield specific hits for these proteins but that the reported activity is a result of pan-assay interference. [I could use an argument analogous to the one that I’ve just used for frequent-hitters to ‘prove’ that compounds with benzene rings in their molecular structure do not yield specific hits and that any reported activity is due to pan-assay interference. The authors do not appear to have presented a single example of a fused THQ that has been shown by experiment to exhibit pan-assay interference.]

Concluding remarks

Our review and evidence-based experiments solidify the idea that tricyclic THQs are nuisance compounds that cause pan-assay interference in the majority of screens rather than privileged structures worthy of chemical optimization. [While I certainly agree that chemical instability would constitute a nuisance, I would consider it wildly extravagant to claim that tricyclic THQs can “cause pan assay interference” since nobody appears to have actually observed pan-assay interference for even a single tricyclic THQ.] Their widespread micromolar activities on a broad range of proteins with diverse assay readouts support our assertion that they are unlikely to be valid hits. [As stated previously, I do not consider that “widespread micromolar activities on a broad range of proteins” observed for compounds that share a particular structural feature implies that all compounds with the particular structural feature are unlikely to be valid hits.]

So that concludes my review of the B2023 study. I really liked the experimental work that revealed the instability of 1 and linked it to the presence of the double bond in the 'third' ring.  Furthermore, these experimental results would (at least for me) raise questions about the chemical stability of some scaffolds that are structurally-related to 1. However, I found the analysis of the bioactivity data reported in the literature for fused THQs to be unconvincing to the extent that it significantly weakened the B2023 study. 

2 comments:

Tudor Oprea said...

Once again, von K storms the Bunker. His pAiNs DiSliKe is self evident and he extends this courtesy to a nice chemical detective work on fused tetrahydroquinolines, which may have been too enthusiastic on the generality of the findings. Von K's arguments are on solid ground. I wouldn't want to be in the opposing team in the debate club.

Peter Kenny said...

PoD is thanked for his comment and von K notes that the real peril of PAINS manifests itself when journal editors get persuaded to mandate the use of PAINS filters for the evaluation of manuscripts. The chemical detective work is indeed nice and the authors have dug up significantly more dirt on the this chemotype than had been previously unearthed (in my view they may even have staked it through the heart and I hope that you don’t consider it to be in poor taste for me to put it this way). For me, the real tragedy is that the authors still felt compelled to convince their readers that compounds incorporating the chemotype are PAINS even after having provided compelling evidence for chemical instability.