Covalent small molecule drugs have emerged as a crucial
support
in precision therapy due to their high selectivity and robust potency.
Covalent DNA-encoded chemical library (CoDEL) technology is an advanced
platform for covalent drug discovery. However, the application of
CoDELs is constrained by a single-residue focus and limited warhead
diversity. Here we report a method to identify residue-selective inhibitors
using CoDELs with diverse warheads targeting multiple distinct residues.
We systematically evaluated the reactivity of 17 warheads with 9 nucleophilic
amino acids of FGFR2 and then constructed CoDELs comprising 24.8 million
compounds. These CoDELs enabled the identification of active covalent
inhibitors targeting cysteine, lysine, arginine, or glutamic acid.
The lysine-targeting inhibitor engaged a novel reactive site. The
arginine-targeting inhibitor demonstrated subtype selectivity and
overcame drug resistance. The glutamic acid-targeting inhibitor validated
the druggability of this unconventional covalent residue site. These
findings suggest that our work could potentially expand the target
space of covalent drugs and promote precision therapy by harnessing
the power of the CoDELs.