Understanding non-covalent biomolecular recognition, which includes drug-protein bound states and their binding/unbinding processes, is of fundamental importance in chemistry, biology, and medicine. Fully revealing the factors that govern the binding/unbinding processes can further assist in designing drugs with desired binding kinetics. HIV protease (HIVp) plays an integral role in the HIV life cycle, so it is a prime target for drug therapy. HIVp has flexible flaps, and the binding pocket can be accessible by a ligand via various pathways. Comparing ligand association and dissociation pathways can help elucidate the ligand-protein interactions such as key residues directly involved in the interaction or specific protein conformations that determine the binding of a ligand under certain pathway(s). Here, we investigated the ligand unbinding process for a slow binder, ritonavir, and a fast binder, xk263, by using unbiased all-atom accelerated molecular dynamics (aMD) simulation with a re-seeding approach and an explicit solvent model. Using ritonavir-HIVp and xk263-HIVp ligand-protein systems as cases, we sampled multiple unbinding pathways for each ligand and observed that the two ligands preferred the same unbinding route. However, ritonavir required a greater HIVp motion to dissociate as compared with xk263, which can leave the binding pocket with little conformational change of HIVp. We also observed that ritonavir unbinding pathways involved residues which are associated with drug resistance and are distal from catalytic site. Analyzing HIVp conformations sampled during both ligand-protein binding and unbinding processes revealed significantly more overlapping HIVp conformations for ritonavir-HIVp rather than xk263-HIVp. However, many HIVp conformations are unique in xk263-HIVp unbinding processes. The findings are consistent with previous findings that xk263 prefers an induced-fit model for binding and unbinding, whereas ritonavir favors a conformation selection model. This study deepens our understanding of the dynamic process of ligand unbinding and provides insights into ligand-protein recognition mechanisms and drug discovery.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12010116 | DOI Listing |
Life (Basel)
January 2022
Environmental Toxicology Graduate Program, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA.
Understanding non-covalent biomolecular recognition, which includes drug-protein bound states and their binding/unbinding processes, is of fundamental importance in chemistry, biology, and medicine. Fully revealing the factors that govern the binding/unbinding processes can further assist in designing drugs with desired binding kinetics. HIV protease (HIVp) plays an integral role in the HIV life cycle, so it is a prime target for drug therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochemistry
March 2017
Department of Chemistry, University of California, Riverside , Riverside, California 92521, United States.
Equilibrium constants, together with kinetic rate constants of binding, are key factors in the efficacy and safety of drug compounds, informing drug design. However, the association pathways of protein-ligand binding, which contribute to their kinetic behaviors, are little understood. In this work, we used unbiased all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with an explicit solvent model to study the association processes of protein-ligand binding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Theory Comput
October 2011
Department of Chemistry, University of California, Riverside, California, United States.
Most biological processes are initiated or mediated by the association of ligands and proteins. This work studies multistep, ligand-protein association processes by Brownian dynamics simulations with coarse-grained models for HIV-1 protease (HIVp) and its neutral ligands. We report the average association times when the ligand concentration is 100 μM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteins
July 2011
Department of Medicinal Chemistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1065, USA.
A recent crystal structure of HIV-1 protease (HIVp) was the first to experimentally observe a ligand targeting an open-flap conformation. Researchers studying a symmetric pyrrolidine inhibitor found that two ligands cocrystallized with the protease, forcing an unusual configuration and unique crystallographic contacts. One molecule is centered in the traditional binding site (α pose) and the other binds between the flaps (β pose).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Theory Comput
March 2009
Institute of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Freie Universität Berlin, Fabeckstr. 36a, D-14195 Berlin, Germany, and National Institute of Chemistry, Hajdrihova 19, SI-1001 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
In the absence of structural knowledge on the target protein, the bound ligand conformer (BLC) can be constructed approximately by an indirect drug-design approach that uses a set of ligands binding to the same target. Once the bound ligand conformer (BLC) is known, different strategies of drug design can be pursued. The indirect drug-design approach of the present study is based on the assumption that a set of ligands with chemically different architecture binding to the same target protein carry hidden information of their corresponding true BLCs.
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