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    Peptides : nature.com subject feeds

    Massive barcode-free chemical screenings enable the discovery of bioactive macrocycles with passive membrane permeability

    April 10, 2026
    All Feeds / Peptides : nature.com subject feeds / Massive barcode-free chemical screenings enable the discovery of bioactive macrocycles with passive membrane permeability
    April 10, 2026 Peptides : nature.com subject feeds
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    Subjects

    • Combinatorial libraries
    • Drug discovery and development
    • Peptides

    Abstract

    Synthetic macrocycles offer exceptional potential as therapeutics. However, most high-throughput discovery platforms rely on genetically encoded libraries of large peptide macrocycles, which typically are not optimized for drug like properties. Fully synthetic libraries offer greater flexibility in accessing broader chemical space. Leveraging recent advances in mass spectrometry based library techniques, here we report CycloSEL (Cyclic Self-Encoded Libraries), an end-to-end workflow, that screens synthetic macrocycle libraries enriched in drug-like ‘beyond rule of five’ features. The workflow relies on affinity selections and hit identification by tandem mass spectrometry, eliminating the need for genetic barcodes. We construct a 16 million-member library and validate the approach against the oncology target carbonic anhydrase IX, achieving robust enrichment and accurate identification of true binders. Applying CycloSEL to the acute myeloid leukemia target WD repeat-containing protein 5 (WDR5) yields a macrocycle with subnamolar affinity, and potent inhibition of the WDR5–Mixed-Lineage Leukemia 1 (MLL1) interaction. Subsequent modifications produce a chameleonic macrocycle with passive membrane permeability, serum stability, and anti-proliferative activity in leukemia cells. Together, these results demonstrate that CycloSEL enables discovery of drug-like macrocycles from fully synthetic libraries for intracellular targets.

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    Data availability

    All data were available in the main text or the supplementary information, and from the corresponding author(s) upon request. Raw nLC-MS/MS files and raw single-molecule fluorescence can be found at DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18936386. Source data are provided with this paper.

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    Acknowledgements

    J.M.M. acknowledges funding from NWO (OCENW.M.21.157). S.J.P. and J.L. acknowledge funding from ERC StG (SynTra - 101039354). C.J. was supported by the Ministry of Science and ICT, Korea (Bio&Medical Technology Development Program of the National Research Foundation, RS-2025-02217909; the Basic 782Research Laboratory Program, NRF−2023R1A2C2004745). The Pomplun Lab gratefully acknowledges financial support from Mr. H.J.M. Roels through a donation to the Oncode Institute and KWF’s financial support of the Oncode Institute.

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    Author notes
    1. These authors contributed equally: J. Miguel Mata, Jingming Liu.

    Authors and Affiliations

    1. LACDR, Leiden University, Leiden, 2333 CC, The Netherlands

      J. Miguel Mata, Jingming Liu, Sean M. McKenna, Edith van der Nol, Mike Filius & Sebastian J. Pomplun

    2. Oncode Institute, Utrecht, 3521 AL, The Netherlands

      J. Miguel Mata, Jingming Liu, Sean M. McKenna, Edith van der Nol, Marije Havermans, Ruud Delwel, Mike Filius & Sebastian J. Pomplun

    3. Department of Hematology, Erasmus MC Cancer Institute, Rotterdam, Netherlands

      Marije Havermans & Ruud Delwel

    4. Kavli Institute of NanoScience, Department of BioNanoScience, Delft University of Technology, Delft, 2628 CJ, The Netherlands

      Mike Filius & Chirlmin Joo

    5. Department of Physics, Ewha Womans University, Seoul, 03760, Republic of Korea

      Chirlmin Joo

    6. Molecular Biotechnology and Health Sciences Department., CASSMedChem, University of Torino, via Quarello 15, 10135, Torino, Italy

      Maura Vallaro & Giulia Caron

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    Contributions

    S.J.P. and J.M.M. conceived the strategy and planned the experiments. S.J.P., J.M.M. and J.L. developed the methodology in general and contributed to all experiments. S.Mc.K. contributed to computational studies. E.v.d.N. contributed to the optimization of the affinity selection workflow. M.H. and R.D. developed the cell assays. M.F. and C.J. developed the single-molecule fluorescence binding studies. M.V. and G.C. contributed to physicochemical studies on hits. S.J.P. and J.M.M. wrote the manuscript. All authors discussed the results and commented on the manuscript.

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    Correspondence to Sebastian J. Pomplun.

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    Mata, J.M., Liu, J., McKenna, S.M. et al. Massive barcode-free chemical screenings enable the discovery of bioactive macrocycles with passive membrane permeability. Nat Commun (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-71641-3

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    • Received: 17 December 2025

    • Accepted: 26 March 2026

    • Published: 10 April 2026

    • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-71641-3

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