Despite the important roles played by protein-protein interactions (PPIs) in disease, they have been long considered as 'undruggable'. However, recent advances have suggested that PPIs are druggable but may not follow conventional rules of 'drug ability'. Here we explore which physicochemical parameters are essential for a PPI modulator to be a clinical drug by analysing the physicochemical properties of small-molecule PPI modulators in the market, in clinical trials, and published. Our analysis reveals that those compounds currently on the market have a larger range of values for most of the physicochemical parameters, whereas those in clinical trials fit much more stringently to standard drug-like parameters. This observation was particularly true for molecular weight, clog  and topological polar surface area, where aside from a few outliers, most of the compounds in clinical trials fit within standard drug-like parameters. This implies that the newer PPI modulators are more drug-like than those currently on the market, suggesting that designing new PPI-specific screening libraries should remain within standard drug-like parameters in order to obtain a clinical candidate. Taken together, our analysis has important implications for designing future drug discovery campaigns aimed at targeting PPIs.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8528217PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1md00213aDOI Listing

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