Academic Jobs - Home of Higher Ed Logo

A*STAR Researchers Advance Molecular Glue Discovery to Expand Druggable Targets

288views
Submit News
a group of different colored objects floating in the air
Photo by Google DeepMind on Unsplash

Unlocking New Frontiers in Drug Discovery: The Promise of Molecular Glues

Molecular glues represent a revolutionary class of small molecules in modern therapeutics. Unlike traditional drugs that bind to specific pockets on target proteins, these innovative compounds act as matchmakers, inducing or stabilizing interactions between proteins that would otherwise not associate. This mechanism allows them to modulate protein-protein interactions (PPIs), a vast landscape previously deemed undruggable due to the flat, featureless surfaces involved.

In Singapore's vibrant biotech ecosystem, researchers at the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) are at the forefront of this paradigm shift. Their latest publication in the prestigious Journal of Medicinal Chemistry outlines a transition from serendipitous discoveries to rational design strategies, promising to expand the druggable proteome significantly.

From Serendipity to Systematic Science: The Evolution of Molecular Glue Research

The journey of molecular glues began decades ago with compounds like cyclosporin A and FK506, identified inadvertently during immunosuppression studies. These molecules formed ternary complexes—protein-small molecule-protein—stabilizing interactions between cyclophilin and calcineurin, effectively blocking T-cell activation. Such early finds highlighted the potential but lacked predictability.

Over time, advances in high-throughput screening (HTS), DNA-encoded libraries (DELs), fragment-based approaches, and computational modeling have enabled targeted hunts. The A*STAR team's review details two primary mechanisms: the 'binder-first' model, where the glue alters a protein's surface to recruit a partner, and the stabilization of weak native PPIs via a composite pocket. Examples include lenalidomide recruiting neosubstrates to CRBN E3 ligase for degradation, and emerging covalent glues like zoldonrasib for KRAS G12D.

This evolution is crucial for Singapore, where A*STAR's Experimental Drug Development Centre (EDDC) leverages structural biology and computational chemistry to accelerate such innovations.

A*STAR's Key Contributors: Expertise Driving Innovation

Co-author Congbao Kang, who leads the structural biology team at EDDC, brings deep expertise in NMR spectroscopy for membrane proteins and drug-target interactions. His work has supported fragment screening and mechanism elucidation for diverse modalities. Weijun Xu, heading computational chemistry at EDDC, complements this with skills in molecular modeling and AI-aided design, bridging structure and simulation for rational glue development.

David E. Heppner from SUNY Buffalo rounds out the team, providing insights from US academia. Their collaboration underscores Singapore's role in global networks, with EDDC partnering industry like Daiichi Sankyo and RDP Pharma on degraders.

A*STAR EDDC researchers Congbao Kang and Weijun Xu leading molecular glue research

Mechanisms Unveiled: How Molecular Glues Work

Molecular glues operate via two models. In binder-first, the glue binds one protein, creating a neosurface for the second. Native weak PPIs form pockets stabilized by the glue. Structural snapshots reveal diversity: filaments (BI-3802-BCL6), GPCR modulation (SBI-553-NTSR1), and covalent links.

  • Degradation: Glue-E3-target ternary leads to ubiquitination, superior to bulky PROTACs in permeability.
  • Gain-of-function: Restore signaling without degradation.
  • Undruggable targets: Cancer (KRAS), infections, immunity.

Assays span cell-based (proximity, degradation) and biophysical (NMR, crystallography).Read the full paper.

Abstract molecular structure with blue lines

Photo by Nigel Hoare on Unsplash

Expanding the Druggable Universe: Beyond Traditional Pockets

Only ~20% of proteome is druggable by orthosteric binders. Glues access flat PPIs, enabling E3 recruitment for degradation of 'undruggables' like transcription factors. Singapore's EDDC exemplifies this, with tools for HTS, DELs, and AI screening tailored for glues.

Recent EDDC collaborations on degraders for autoimmune diseases highlight translational impact.

Singapore's Biotech Ascendancy: A*STAR as Catalyst

A*STAR, via EDDC, positions Singapore as Asia's drug discovery hub. Capabilities include hit identification to IND, partnering academia-industry. Biotech investments surged, with RIE2030 prioritizing high-impact R&D. Molecular glues align with precision medicine goals, attracting talent and firms.

IMCB's Shuang Liu also pioneers glue discovery for neurodegeneration, amplifying efforts.

Challenges and Rational Strategies: HTS to AI

Discovery hurdles: Need PPI-focused libraries, sensitive assays. Rational tools: DELs (billions screened), fragments, in silico for interfaces. A*STAR's computational-structural synergy exemplifies.

High-throughput screening and DNA-encoded libraries for molecular glue discovery

Clinical Horizons: From Bench to Bedside

IMiDs like lenalidomide validate clinically. Pipeline includes RMC-6236 (KRAS), zoldonrasib. Singapore accelerates via EDDC's Phase 1 support, e.g., ETC-159 (Wnt inhibitor).Learn more about EDDC.

Future Outlook: Singapore Leading Glue Revolution

This paper charts a roadmap: Integrate multi-omics, AI for prediction. Singapore's ecosystem—talent, funding, partnerships—poises A*STAR for leadership. Expect glues tackling neurodegeneration, rare diseases.

Implications for Global Health and Singapore's Economy

Glues could transform oncology, immunity. For Singapore, bolsters biotech GDP contribution, jobs in R&D. Explore opportunities at research jobs.

Portrait of Dr. Liam Whitaker
About the author

Dr. Liam WhitakerView author

Academic Jobs In House Author

Discussion

Sort by:

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

New0 comments

Join the conversation!

Add your comments now!

Have your say

Engagement level

Browse by Faculty

Browse by Subject

Frequently Asked Questions

🔬What are molecular glues?

Molecular glues are small molecules that induce or stabilize protein-protein interactions (PPIs), forming ternary complexes to modulate biology, often leading to targeted degradation.63

📚How does the A*STAR paper contribute?

It reviews evolution from serendipity to rational strategies like HTS and DELs, highlighting mechanisms and expanding druggability via PPIs.

👥Who are the key A*STAR authors?

Congbao Kang (structural biology lead) and Weijun Xu (computational chemistry head) at EDDC, with David Heppner.

🏢What is EDDC's role?

Singapore's national drug discovery platform under A*STAR, advancing small molecules and antibodies from hit to IND.

💊Why are molecular glues important?

They target undruggable PPIs, enable degradation superior to PROTACs, with applications in cancer and immunity.

🧪What screening methods are used?

HTS with DELs, fragments, in silico for interfaces; assays monitor proximity, degradation.

🌏Singapore's biotech position?

A*STAR drives innovation, partnerships like RDP Pharma on degraders, positioning as Asia hub.

🔮Future of molecular glues?

AI integration, multi-omics for prediction; clinical pipeline growing.

🧬Examples of molecular glues?

Lenalidomide (CRBN neosubstrates), zoldonrasib (KRAS-cyclophilin).

📈Impact on Singapore economy?

Boosts biotech jobs, GDP; attracts talent via research hubs like EDDC.

💼How to pursue research careers here?

Check research jobs in Singapore for A*STAR opportunities.