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ATP-binding pockets impose stringent geometric and electronic constraints on small-molecule ligands, requiring preservation of key anchoring interactions while permitting only limited scaffold modification. Rational optimization of ATP-competitive inhibitors therefore remains challenging, particularly when electronic reactivity and metabolic liability must be balanced against binding stability. We explored a multiscale, quantum-informed computational strategy to address this challenge using the receptor tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor 1 (ROR1) pseudokinase domain, an underexplored intracellular cancer target that retains a druggable ATP-binding pocket, as a chemically informative model system. Using Ponatinib as an internal reference scaffold, eight Fukui-guided analogs (DM1–DM8) were designed through density functional theory analyses integrating Mulliken, Löwdin and Hirshfeld charge partitioning with Fukui function mapping. These calculations identified electronically reactive and metabolically labile regions amenable to site-specific modification at C10, C11, C32, and C35, while preserving the alkyne and carbonyl motifs responsible for anchoring interactions within the ATP-binding pocket. To establish a robust energetic and dynamical baseline, 1 μs all-atom molecular dynamics simulations were performed for the ROR1 pseudokinase domain in both apo and Ponatinib-bound states. The designed analogs were subsequently evaluated using 250 ns simulations combined with relative MM-PBSA binding free-energy analysis, revealing a narrow binding-energy range (ΔGbind ≈ −37 to −45 kcal mol–1) comparable to Ponatinib (−41. 78 ± 5. 65 kcal mol–1 at 250 ns; −40. 23 ± 5. 61 kcal mol–1 at 1 μs). Interaction fingerprint analysis confirmed conservation of the hinge-anchored Glu71-Ile103-Asp181 network and the Phe100-Tyr102 aromatic clamp across the series. In silico ADME profiling differentiated developability among energetically similar compounds, identifying DM3–DM5 as the most balanced analogs. Collectively, quantum-mechanical reactivity descriptors can delineate electronically feasible scaffold modification sites within ATP-binding pockets─positions where chemical perturbation is tolerated without disrupting anchoring pharmacophore interactions─providing substantively complementary information distinct from, classical energy-based scoring or empirical SAR.
Dewaker et al. (Wed,) studied this question.