A comprehensive kinetic model for ternary complex catalysis

27 January 2022, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Ternary-complex directed enzyme catalysis underlies a vast array of biological processes and several clinical therapies including growth hormones, interferon, and heparin. Recently, interest in ternary catalysis drugs has increased significantly with the rapid expansion of research new technologies such as bispecific antibodies and proteolysis targeting chimeras (PROTAC’s). Here, we derive a general model for ternary complex catalysis that defines the timescales of these diverse processes in familiar terms from classical enzyme theory. This was accomplished by solving for the maximum velocity (Vmax) and adapting an under-appreciated strategy within Michaels and Menten’s original publication: integration of the velocity equation. Critically, these equations are simple, conceptually accessible, and enables rapid estimation timescales that are consistent with a wide range of published literature. Finally, we have combined these equations with “big data” from new thermodynamic and kinetic databases to build interactive online tools that enable non-computational investigators to graphically simulate their own systems: • https://douglasslab.com/Btmax_kinetics/ Overall, this work is part of a general trend to reconceptualize pharmacodynamics from classical binding equilibria (e.g. Langmuir-Hill equation) to a kinetic processes with a characteristic timescale.

Keywords

PROTACs
ternary complex kinetics
ternary complex equilibria
bifunctional drugs
molecular glues

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information:
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Supporting Figures and Images
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Supp 01 - Experimental Data from the Literature
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Ternary complex catalysis data extracted from the the primary literature and reanalyzed here
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Supp 02 - Database Data
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Thermodynamic and kinetic constant data extracted from previously published databases
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