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Decoding the Role of Water Dynamics in Ligand-Protein Unbinding: CRF1R as a Test Case.

Authors :
Bortolato A
Deflorian F
Weiss DR
Mason JS
Source :
Journal of chemical information and modeling [J Chem Inf Model] 2015 Sep 28; Vol. 55 (9), pp. 1857-66. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Sep 10.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The residence time of a ligand-protein complex is a crucial aspect in determining biological effect in vivo. Despite its importance, the prediction of ligand koff still remains challenging for modern computational chemistry. We have developed aMetaD, a fast and generally applicable computational protocol to predict ligand-protein unbinding events using a molecular dynamics (MD) method based on adiabatic-bias MD and metadynamics. This physics-based, fully flexible, and pose-dependent ligand scoring function evaluates the maximum energy (RTscore) required to move the ligand from the bound-state energy basin to the next. Unbinding trajectories are automatically analyzed and translated into atomic solvation factor (SF) values representing the water dynamics during the unbinding event. This novel computational protocol was initially tested on two M3 muscarinic receptor and two adenosine A2A receptor antagonists and then evaluated on a test set of 12 CRF1R ligands. The resulting RTscores were used successfully to classify ligands with different residence times. Additionally, the SF analysis was used to detect key differences in the degree of accessibility to water molecules during the predicted ligand unbinding events. The protocol provides actionable working hypotheses that are applicable in a drug discovery program for the rational optimization of ligand binding kinetics.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1549-960X
Volume :
55
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of chemical information and modeling
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26335976
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jcim.5b00440