looking back at mycobacterium tuberculosis mouse efficacy testing to move new drugs forward

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OBJECTS IN MIRROR ARE CLOSER THAN THEY APPEAR Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward Sean Ekins 1,2 , Robert C. Reynolds 3 , Antony J. Williams 4 , Alex M. Clark 5 and Joel S. Freundlich 6 1 Collaborative Drug Discovery 2 Collaborations in Chemistry 3 University of Alabama at Birmingham 4 Royal Society of Chemistry 5 Molecular Materials Informatics 6 Rutgers University – New Jersey Medical School

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ACS 2014 talk in Dallas March 16

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Page 1: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

OBJECTS IN MIRROR ARE CLOSER THAN THEY APPEAR

Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse

Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Sean Ekins1,2, Robert C. Reynolds3 , Antony J. Williams4, Alex M. Clark5 and Joel S. Freundlich6

1 Collaborative Drug Discovery 2 Collaborations in Chemistry 3 University of Alabama at Birmingham 4 Royal Society of Chemistry 5 Molecular Materials Informatics 6 Rutgers University – New Jersey Medical School

Page 2: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Tuberculosis kills 1.6-1.7m/yr (~1

every 8 seconds)

1/3rd of worlds population infected!!!!

Page 3: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

streptomycin (1943)

para-aminosalicyclic acid (1949)

isoniazid (1952)

pyrazinamide (1954)

cycloserine (1955)

ethambutol (1962)

rifampicin (1967)

Multi drug resistance in 4.3% of cases

Extensively drug resistant increasing incidence

one new drug (bedaquiline) in 40 yrs

Page 4: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Ponder et al., Pharm Res 31: 271-277, 2014

Page 5: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Over 5 years analyzed in vitro data and built models

Top scoring molecules

assayed for

Mtb growth inhibition

Mtb screening

molecule

database/s

High-throughput

phenotypic

Mtb screening

Descriptors + Bioactivity (+Cytotoxicity)

Bayesian Machine Learning classification Mtb Model

Molecule Database

(e.g. GSK malaria

actives)

virtually scored

using Bayesian Models

New bioactivity data

may enhance models

Identify in vitro hits and test models

3 x published prospective tests >20% hit rate

Multiple retrospective tests 3-10 fold enrichment

NH

S

N

Ekins et al., Pharm Res 31: 414-435, 2014

Ekins, et al., Tuberculosis 94; 162-169, 2014

Ekins, et al., PLOSONE 8; e63240, 2013

Ekins, et al., Chem Biol 20: 370-378, 2013

Ekins, et al., JCIM, 53: 3054−3063, 2013

Ekins and Freundlich, Pharm Res, 28, 1859-1869, 2011

Ekins et al., Mol BioSyst, 6: 840-851, 2010

Ekins, et al., Mol. Biosyst. 6, 2316-2324, 2010,

Page 6: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

• BAS00521003/ TCMDC-125802 reported to be a P.

falciparum lactate dehydrogenase inhibitor

• Only one report of antitubercular activity from 1969

- solid agar MIC = 1 mg/mL (“wild strain”)

- “no activity” in mouse model up to 400 mg/kg

- however, activity was solely judged by

extension of survival!

Bruhin, H. et al., J. Pharm. Pharmac. 1969, 21, 423-433.

.

MIC of 0.0625 ug/mL • 64X MIC affords 6 logs of

kill

• Resistance and/or drug

instability beyond 14 d

Vero cells : CC50 = 4.0

mg/mL

Selectivity Index SI =

CC50/MICMtb = 16 – 64

In mouse no toxicity but

also no efficacy in GKO

model – probably

metabolized.

Ekins et al.,Chem Biol 20, 370–378, 2013

Taking a compound in vivo identifies issues

Page 7: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Tested >350,000 molecules Tested ~2M 2M >300,000

>1500 active and non toxic Published 177 100s 800

Big Data: Screening for New Tuberculosis Treatments

How many will become a new drug? How do we learn from this big data?

Others have likely screened another 500,000

Page 8: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Can combining Big and Small

data (in vitro, in vivo) help us

find better compounds,

faster ?

Avoid testing as

many molecules

Need to ensure PK/ADME

properties are good …

Page 9: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

What is the next bottleneck?

$ $ $ $ $ Five-fold increase in the publication of TB mouse model studies from 1997 to 2009 Franco, PLoS One 7, e47723 (2012).

Page 10: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Billions of $ of your money spent on TB

but no database of mouse in vivo data !

Page 11: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Hunting for the in vivo data It’s out there.. be patient

Page 12: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

PubMed, SciFinder (CAS, Columbus OH) Web of Knowledge (Thomson Reuters) Individual journals (e.g. Tuberculosis, the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, and PLOS journals). Searched for papers with compounds tested in murine acute and chronic Mtb infection models. “tuberculosis and in vivo and mouse”, “Tuberculosis and efficacy and mouse” and “comparison and antituberculosis and mouse”. Compounds from >100 sources -papers, books, slides…

Data sources

Page 13: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Building the mouse TB database Manually curated, structures sketched Mobile Molecular DataSheet (MMDS) iOS app or ChemDraw (Perkin Elmer) Downloaded from www.chemspider.com Combined with pertinent data fields 1 log10 reduction in Mtb colony-forming units (CFUs) in the lungs Publically available CDD TB database (In process)

Page 14: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

MW AlogP HBD HBA Num Rings

Num Arom

Rings FPSA RBN

Active

(N = 362) 417.25 ± 454.39 3.11 ± 2.71* 1.49 ± 2.17 6.68 ± 8.33 2.96 ± 2.09* 1.72 ± 1.46 0.29 ± 0.13* 7.84 ± 22.48

Inactive

(N = 411) 386.95 ± 440.40 3.89 ± 4.88 1.39 ± 1.86 5.75 ± 6.20 2.51 ± 2.70 1.90 ± 2.37 0.31 ± 0.14 8.09 ± 16.05

MW AlogP HBD HBA Num Rings

Num Arom

Rings FPSA RBN

Active

(N = 362) 417.25 ± 454.39 3.11 ± 2.71* 1.49 ± 2.17 6.68 ± 8.33 2.96 ± 2.09* 1.72 ± 1.46 0.29 ± 0.13* 7.84 ± 22.48

Inactive

(N = 411) 386.95 ± 440.40 3.89 ± 4.88 1.39 ± 1.86 5.75 ± 6.20 2.51 ± 2.70 1.90 ± 2.37 0.31 ± 0.14 8.09 ± 16.05

Mean of molecular descriptors for N = 773 in vivo Mtb dataset, comparing actives and inactives

The AlogP observation is opposite to what we see for in vitro data

Page 15: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

30 years with little TB mouse in vivo data MIND THE TB GAP

Page 16: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward
Page 17: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Where are the New TB drugs to be found?

PCA of in vivo (yellow) and compounds with known targets (blue)

PCA of TB in vitro actives (blue) TB in vivo (yellow)

PCA of In vivo actives and inactives Inactive (blue) Active (yellow)

Page 18: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Machine Learning Models Bayesian Support Vector Machine Recursive partitioning (single and multiple trees) Using Accelrys Discovery Studio and R.

RP Forest RP Single

Tree

SVM

Bayesian

0.75 0.71 0.77 0.73 ROC 5 fold cross validation

Page 19: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Leave-one-

out ROC

Leave-out

50% x 100

External ROC

Score

Leave-out

50% x 100

Internal

ROC Score

Leave-out 50%

x 100

Concordance

Leave-out

50% x 100

Specificity

Leave-out 50%

x 100

Sensitivity

0.77 0.72± 0.02 0.74 ± 0.02 66.91± 2.24 74.23 ± 8.96 58.46 ± 9.19

Bayesian Model Studio and R.

Model statistics are reasonable

Page 20: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

RP Forest RP Single

Tree

SVM

Bayesian

3 /11

(27.2%)

4/11

(36.4%)

7/11

(63.6%)

8/11

(72.7%)

External Test set Studio and R.

11 additional active molecules obtained from 1953-2013

Page 21: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Bayesian Models: Back to the Dark Ages

in vivo computational models

24 consensus actives

Page 22: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

MoDELS RESIDE IN PAPERS

NOT ACCESSIBLE…THIS IS

UNDESIRABLE

How do we share them?

How do we use Them?

Page 23: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

ECFP_6 FCFP_6 • Collected,

deduplicated, hashed

• Sparse integers

• Invented for Pipeline Pilot: public method, proprietary details

• Often used with Bayesian models: many published papers

• Built a new implementation: open source, Java, CDK – stable: fingerprints don't change with each new toolkit release

– well defined: easy to document precise steps

– easy to port: already migrated to iOS (Objective-C) for TB Mobile app

• Provides core basis feature for CDD open source model service

Page 24: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Dataset Leave one out ROC Published

Reference Leave one out ROC Open fingerprints

In vivo data (773 molecules) FCFP_6

fingerprints

0.77 this study 0.75

Combined model (5304 molecules) FCFP_6

fingerprints

0.71 J Chem Inf Model

53:3054-3063.

0.77

MLSMR dual event model (2273 molecules) and FCFP_6 fingerprints

0.86 PLOSONE 8:e63240

0.83

Same datasets –

Versus published data

Page 25: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Open fingerprints and bayesian method used in TB Mobile Vers.2

Predict targets

Cluster molecules

Could we add in vivo prediction models to this?

Ekins et al., J Cheminform 5:13, 2013

Clark et al., submitted 2014

Page 26: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Optimal Human properties

Optimal Mouse properties

Optimal TB entry properties

Page 27: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

In vitro data In vivo data

Target data

ADME/Tox data & Models

Drug-like scaffold creation

TB Prediction Tools TB Publications

Data sources and tools we could integrate

Page 28: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

«Tuberculosis and mouse in vivo model » ~338 papers in PubMed

«Malaria and mouse in vivo model » ~314 papers in PubMed

We could do this again for a different disease Small data: Mouse In vivo model data

Page 29: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

A much higher ratio of compounds were tested in vivo to in vitro in the 1940s-1960s rather than now Infrastructure to provide a clear understanding of the position of compounds in the pipeline is essentially lacking Shortage of new candidates suggest we may lack the commitment and resources we had 6o years ago Use machine learning in vivo models to prioritize Mouse studies

Ekins, Nuermberger & Freundlich Submitted

The Clock is ticking

Page 30: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Replacement Reduction Refinement

Descriptors + Bioactivity

Literature data on in vivo testing ~ 1500 molecules

Test models with in vivo testing after in vitro ADME and in vivo PK

Bayesian, SVM, Trees etc

Page 31: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

http://goo.gl/vPOKS http://goo.gl/iDJFR

TB Mobile Vers 2 – Is on iTunes and Google play and it is FREE

http://goo.gl/7fGFW

Page 32: Looking Back at Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mouse  Efficacy Testing To Move New Drugs Forward

Acknowledgments: Richard S. Pottorf, Anna Coulon Spektor, Dr. Barbara Laughon 2R42AI088893-02 from the National Institute of Allergy And Infectious Diseases. (PI: S. Ekins) R43 LM011152-01 from the National Library of Medicine (PI S. Ekins).