Fragments in Brazil
Most of the fragment events we’ve
highlighted are in the US, Europe, and Australia, but that does not fully reflect
where all the good science is happening. In a recent ACS Med. Chem.
Lett. paper, Carolina Horta Andrade, Maria Cristina Nonato, and Flavio da Silva Emery
introduce CRAFT: the Center for Research and Advancement in Fragments and molecular Targets.
Established in 2021, CRAFT is a
collaboration between the University of Saõ Paulo and the Federal University of
Goiás. The center is focused on endemic diseases of Brazil. As the researchers
note, only one of the 60 or so fragment-derived drugs that have entered the
clinic is an anti-infective, so there is clearly significant need. CRAFT also has
an educational and training component reminiscent of the European FragNet and
the Australian Centre for Fragment-Based Design.
One focus of CRAFT is fragment
library design, including underexplored heterocyclic systems. Importantly, the
researchers are investigating new synthetic methodologies to be able to
functionalize different regions of the fragments. They are also exploring fragments
similar to or derived from natural products.
Targets are of course essential,
and CRAFT is investing in protein production and characterization, such as the enzyme
DHODH from Leishmania; we’ve written recently about a fragment approach to
the mammalian counterpart.
Finally, CRAFT is investing in
structure-based design, ligand-based design, and phenotypic screening. And in
2024 no venture would be complete without use of machine learning.
Academic laboratories often
struggle with downstream drug discovery efforts such as drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics.
CRAFT recognizes this and has partnered with the Welcome Centre for
Anti-Infectives Research to train participants in DMPK.
The researchers “invite the global scientific
community to collaborate with us in addressing neglected diseases.” I hope they
succeed. Five years ago we highlighted the consortium Open Source Antibiotics,
but that site seems to be updated infrequently. The COVID Moonshot has been more
successful but is arguably less urgent given the billions of dollars of
industry money that poured into research on SARS-CoV-2. From an ethical
perspective society should invest more on combating tropical
diseases. And as the planet warms, these diseases will increasingly move out of
the tropics.