The
development of covalent ligands for G protein-coupled receptors
(GPCRs) is not a trivial process. Here, we report a streamlined workflow
thereto from synthesis to validation, exemplified by the discovery
of a covalent antagonist for the human adenosine A3 receptor
(hA3AR). Based on the 1H,3H-pyrido[2,1-f]purine-2,4-dione scaffold, a series
of ligands bearing a fluorosulfonyl warhead and a varying linker was
synthesized. This series was subjected to an affinity screen, revealing
compound 17b as the most potent antagonist. In addition,
a nonreactive methylsulfonyl derivative 19 was developed
as a reversible control compound. A series of assays, comprising time-dependent
affinity determination, washout experiments, and [35S]GTPγS
binding assays, then validated 17b as the covalent antagonist.
A combined in silico hA3AR-homology model and site-directed
mutagenesis study was performed to demonstrate that amino acid residue
Y2657.36 was the unique anchor point of the covalent interaction.
This workflow might be applied to other GPCRs to guide the discovery
of covalent ligands.
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