4.7 Article

Yeast Synthetic Biology Platform Generates Novel Chemical Structures as Scaffolds for Drug Discovery

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 3, Issue 5, Pages 314-323

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/sb400177x

Keywords

synthetic biology; yeast; drug discovery; novel structures; diversity; scaffold-sized

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Synthetic biology has been heralded as a new bioengineering platform for the production of bulk and specialty chemicals, drugs, and fuels. Here, we report for the first time a series of 74 novel compounds produced using a combinatorial genetics approach in baker's yeast. Based on the concept of coevolution with target proteins in an intracellular primary survival assay, the identified, mostly scaffold-sized (200-350 MW) compounds, which displayed excellent biological activity, can be considered as prevalidated hits. Of the molecules found, >75% have not been described previously; 20% of the compounds exhibit novel scaffolds. Their structural and physicochemical properties comply with established rules of drug- and fragment-likeness and exhibit increased structural complexities compared to synthetically produced fragments. In summary, the synthetic biology approach described here represents a completely new, complementary strategy for hit and early lead identification that can be easily integrated into the existing drug discovery process.

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