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Competitive Binding of Viral Nuclear Localization Signal Peptide and Inhibitor Ligands to Importin-α Nuclear Transport Protein.

Authors :
Delfing BM
Laracuente XE
Jeffries W
Luo X
Olson A
Foreman KW
Petruncio G
Lee KH
Paige M
Kehn-Hall K
Lockhart C
Klimov DK
Source :
Journal of chemical information and modeling [J Chem Inf Model] 2024 Jul 08; Vol. 64 (13), pp. 5262-5272. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jun 13.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV) is a highly virulent pathogen whose nuclear localization signal (NLS) sequence from capsid protein binds to the host importin-α transport protein and blocks nuclear import. We studied the molecular mechanisms by which two small ligands, termed I1 and I2, interfere with the binding of VEEV's NLS peptide to importin-α protein. To this end, we performed all-atom replica exchange molecular dynamics simulations probing the competitive binding of the VEEV coreNLS peptide and I1 or I2 ligand to the importin-α major NLS binding site. As a reference, we used our previous simulations, which examined noncompetitive binding of the coreNLS peptide or the inhibitors to importin-α. We found that both inhibitors completely abrogate the native binding of the coreNLS peptide, forcing it to adopt a manifold of nonnative loosely bound poses within the importin-α major NLS binding site. Both inhibitors primarily destabilize the native coreNLS binding by masking its amino acids rather than competing with it for binding to importin-α. Because I2, in contrast to I1, binds off-site localizing on the edge of the major NLS binding site, it inhibits fewer coreNLS native binding interactions than I1. Structural analysis is supported by computations of the free energies of the coreNLS peptide binding to importin-α with or without competition from the inhibitors. Specifically, both inhibitors reduce the free energy gain from coreNLS binding, with I1 causing significantly larger loss than I2. To test our simulations, we performed AlphaScreen experiments measuring IC50 values for both inhibitors. Consistent with in silico results, the IC50 value for I1 was found to be lower than that for I2. We hypothesize that the inhibitory action of I1 and I2 ligands might be specific to the NLS from VEEV's capsid protein.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1549-960X
Volume :
64
Issue :
13
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of chemical information and modeling
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38869471
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jcim.4c00626