Dynamic Combinatorial Optimization of In Vitro and In Vivo Heparin Antidotes

Other authors

Universitat Ramon Llull. IQS

Publication date

2022-03-02



Abstract

Heparin-like macromolecules are widely used in clinics as anticoagulant, antiviral, and anticancer drugs. However, the search of heparin antidotes based on small synthetic molecules to control blood coagulation still remains a challenging task due to the physicochemical properties of this anionic polysaccharide. Here, we use a dynamic combinatorial chemistry approach to optimize heparin binders with submicromolar affinity. The recognition of heparin by the most amplified members of the dynamic library has been studied with different experimental (SPR, fluorescence, NMR) and theoretical approaches, rendering a detailed interaction model. The enzymatic assays with selected library members confirm the correlation between the dynamic covalent screening and the in vitro heparin inhibition. Moreover, both ex vivo and in vivo blood coagulation assays with mice show that the optimized molecules are potent antidotes with potential use as heparin reversal drugs. Overall, these results underscore the power of dynamic combinatorial chemistry targeting complex and elusive biopolymers.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

13 p.

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Published in

American Chemical Society

Grant Agreement Number

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MCI i AEI i FEDER/PN I+D/RTI2018-096182-B-I00

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MCI i AEI i FEDER/PN I+D/CSIC13-4E-2076

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/SUR del DEC/SGR/2017 SGR 208

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Attribution 4.0 International

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

IQS [794]