| Literature DB >> 31697501 |
Steffen Wolf1,2, Marta Amaral3,4,5, Maryse Lowinski6, Francois Vallée6, Djordje Musil4, Jörn Güldenhaupt1, Matthias K Dreyer7, Jörg Bomke8, Matthias Frech4, Jürgen Schlitter1, Klaus Gerwert1.
Abstract
We here report on nonequilibrium targeted molecular dynamics simulations as a tool for the estimation of protein-ligand unbinding kinetics. Correlating simulations with experimental data from SPR kinetics measurements and X-ray crystallography on two small molecule compound libraries bound to the N-terminal domain of the chaperone Hsp90, we show that the mean nonequilibrium work computed in an ensemble of trajectories of enforced ligand unbinding is a promising predictor for ligand unbinding rates. We furthermore investigate the molecular basis determining unbinding rates within the compound libraries. We propose ligand conformational changes and protein-ligand nonbonded interactions to impact on unbinding rates. Ligands may remain longer at the protein if they exhibit strong electrostatic and/or van der Waals interactions with the target. In the case of ligands with a rigid chemical scaffold that exhibit longer residence times, transient electrostatic interactions with the protein appear to facilitate unbinding. Our results imply that understanding the unbinding pathway and the protein-ligand interactions along this path is crucial for the prediction of small molecule ligands with defined unbinding kinetics.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31697501 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.9b00592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chem Inf Model ISSN: 1549-9596 Impact factor: 4.956