| Literature DB >> 31940798 |
Abstract
The angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) is a two-domain dipeptidylcarboxypeptidase, which has a direct involvement in the control of blood pressure by performing the hydrolysis of angiotensin I to produce angiotensin II. At the same time, ACE hydrolyzes other substrates such as the vasodilator peptide bradykinin and the anti-inflammatory peptide N-acetyl-SDKP. In this sense, ACE inhibitors are bioactive substances with potential use as medicinal products for treatment or prevention of hypertension, heart failures, myocardial infarction, and other important diseases. This review examined the most recent literature reporting ACE inhibitors with the help of molecular modeling. The examples exposed here demonstrate that molecular modeling methods, including docking, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR), etc, are essential for a complete structural picture of the mode of action of ACE inhibitors, where molecular docking has a key role. Examples show that too many works identified ACE inhibitory activities of natural peptides and peptides obtained from hydrolysates. In addition, other works report non-peptide compounds extracted from natural sources and synthetic compounds. In all these cases, molecular docking was used to provide explanation of the chemical interactions between inhibitors and the ACE binding sites. For docking applications, most of the examples exposed here do not consider that: (i) ACE has two domains (nACE and cACE) with available X-ray structures, which are relevant for the design of selective inhibitors, and (ii) nACE and cACE binding sites have large dimensions, which leads to non-reliable solutions during docking calculations. In support of the solution of these problems, the structural information found in Protein Data Bank (PDB) was used to perform an interaction fingerprints (IFPs) analysis applied on both nACE and cACE domains. This analysis provides plots that identify the chemical interactions between ligands and both ACE binding sites, which can be used to guide docking experiments in the search of selective natural components or novel drugs. In addition, the use of hydrogen bond constraints in the S2 and S2' subsites of nACE and cACE are suggested to guarantee that docking solutions are reliable.Entities:
Keywords: angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors; docking; drug selectivity; interaction fingerprints; rational drug design
Year: 2020 PMID: 31940798 PMCID: PMC7024173 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25020295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Residues in the S2, S1, S1′, and S2′ subsites with respect to the catalytic Zn2+ for nACE/cACE and their position in the sequences. Squares have nACE residues before the slash and cACE residues after the slash. Only residues from the IFP analysis are included.
Figure 2Occurrence of interaction types at the nACE and cACE binding interfaces from IFPs for ACE-ligand structures reported in PDB, (nACE-ligand structures are in (A) and cACE-ligand structures are in (B)). Top part of both A and B plots % of occurrence of contacts C, interactions with the backbone of the residue B, and interactions with the side chain of the residue S per residue. Bottom part of both A and B plots % of occurrence of chemical interactions: contacts C, polar P, hydrophobic H, HBs where the residue is acceptor A, HBs where the residue is donor D, aromatic Ar, and electrostatic with charged groups Ch.
Figure 3Constraints proposed for ACE inhibitors. C1, C2 and C3 are the constraints defined for docking experiment. VC1 and VC2 are constraints subsequently detected by visual inspection.
ACE-ligand HB distances for poses obtained from Glide docking using constraints C1 and C2 (or C3).
| Compound | PDB | d[C3] (Å) 1 | d[C2] (Å) 2 | d[VC2] (Å) 3 | d[VC1] (Å) 4 | d[C1] (Å) 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| nACE | ||||||
|
| (6EN5//6F9V) | - | 3.1//3.2 | 1.9//2.0 | 2.9/2.9//2.7/2.9 | 2.7//3.0 |
|
| (6F9V) | 2.9 | - | 2.9 | 3.2/2.8 | 3.1 |
|
| (6EN5) | - | 3.1 | 1.9 | 2.9/2.8 | 2.9 |
| cACE | ||||||
|
| (6F9T//6F9U) | - | 3.0//3.2 | 1.9//2.1 | 7.6 6/3.2//4.1/2.7 | 2.8//2.8 |
|
| (6F9U) | 2.6 | - | 2.0 | 2.5/2.7 | 3.2 |
|
| (6F9T) | 3.1 | - | 1.9 | 8.6 6/3.2 | 2.8 |
1 d[C3] represents the distance between one of the oxygen or nitrogen atoms from the ligand R group (the closest one) and CO of the residue A334/A356 from nACE/cACE. 2 d[C2] represents the distance between one of the oxygen atoms from the ligand R group (the closest one) and NH of the residue A334/A356 from nACE/cACE. 3 d[VC2] represents the distance between one of the ligand central carboxylate oxygen atoms (the closest one) and the Zn2+ ion. 4 d[VC1] represents the distance between the ligand CO oxygen atom and the Nε of the residue H331/H353 from nACE/cACE//and the distance between the ligand CO oxygen atom and the Nε of the residue H491/H513 from nACE/cACE. 5 d[C1] represents the distance between one of the ligand C-terminal carboxylate oxygen atoms (the closest one) and the side chain N of the residue K489/K511 from nACE/cACE. 6 High values of d[VC1] in PDB 6F9T are expected for distance between the ligand CO oxygen atom and the Nε of the residue H353 because an atypical displacement of the residue H353 in this structure.