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W254 in furin functions as a molecular gate promoting anti-viral drug binding: Elucidation of putative drug tunneling and docking by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics

Furins are serine endoproteases that process precursor proteins into their biologically active forms, and they play essential roles in normal metabolism and disease presentation, including promoting expression of bacterial virulence factors and viral pathogenesis. Thus, furins represent vital target...

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Autores principales: Ridgway, Harry, Orbell, John D., Matsoukas, Minos-Timotheos, Kelaidonis, Konstantinos, Moore, Graham J., Tsiodras, Sotiris, Gorgoulis, Vasilis G., Chasapis, Christos T., Apostolopoulos, Vasso, Matsoukas, John M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Research Network of Computational and Structural Biotechnology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10561063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37817778
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.csbj.2023.09.003
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author Ridgway, Harry
Orbell, John D.
Matsoukas, Minos-Timotheos
Kelaidonis, Konstantinos
Moore, Graham J.
Tsiodras, Sotiris
Gorgoulis, Vasilis G.
Chasapis, Christos T.
Apostolopoulos, Vasso
Matsoukas, John M.
author_facet Ridgway, Harry
Orbell, John D.
Matsoukas, Minos-Timotheos
Kelaidonis, Konstantinos
Moore, Graham J.
Tsiodras, Sotiris
Gorgoulis, Vasilis G.
Chasapis, Christos T.
Apostolopoulos, Vasso
Matsoukas, John M.
author_sort Ridgway, Harry
collection PubMed
description Furins are serine endoproteases that process precursor proteins into their biologically active forms, and they play essential roles in normal metabolism and disease presentation, including promoting expression of bacterial virulence factors and viral pathogenesis. Thus, furins represent vital targets for development of antimicrobial and antiviral therapeutics. Recent experimental evidence indicated that dichlorophenyl (DCP)-pyridine “BOS” drugs (e.g., BOS-318) competitively inhibit human furin by an induced-fit mechanism in which tryptophan W254 in the furin catalytic cleft (FCC) functions as a molecular gate, rotating nearly 180(o) through a steep energy barrier about its chi-1 dihedral to an “open” orientation, exposing a buried (i.e., cryptic) hydrophobic pocket (1). Once exposed, the non-polar DCP group of BOS-318, and similar halo-phenyl groups of analogs, enter the cryptic pocket, stabilizing drug binding. Here, we demonstrate flexible-receptor docking of BOS-318 (and various analogs) was unable to emulate the induced-fit motif, even when tryptophan was replaced with less bulky phenylalanine or glycine. While either substitution allowed access to the hydrophobic pocket for most ligands tested, optimal binding was observed only for W254, inferring a stabilizing effect of the indole sidechain. Furthermore, non-equilibrium steered molecular dynamics (sMD) in which the bound drugs (or their fragments) were extracted from the FCC did not cause closure of the open W254 gate, consistent with the thermodynamic stability of the open or closed W254 orientations. Finally, interactive molecular dynamics (iMD) revealed two putative conduits of drug entry and binding into the FCC, each coupled with W254 dihedral rotation and opening of the cryptic pocket. The iMD simulations further revealed ligand entry and binding in the FCC is likely driven in part by energy fluxes stemming from disruption and re-formation of ligand and protein solvation shells during drug migration from the solution phase into the FCC.
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spelling pubmed-105610632023-10-10 W254 in furin functions as a molecular gate promoting anti-viral drug binding: Elucidation of putative drug tunneling and docking by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics Ridgway, Harry Orbell, John D. Matsoukas, Minos-Timotheos Kelaidonis, Konstantinos Moore, Graham J. Tsiodras, Sotiris Gorgoulis, Vasilis G. Chasapis, Christos T. Apostolopoulos, Vasso Matsoukas, John M. Comput Struct Biotechnol J Research Article Furins are serine endoproteases that process precursor proteins into their biologically active forms, and they play essential roles in normal metabolism and disease presentation, including promoting expression of bacterial virulence factors and viral pathogenesis. Thus, furins represent vital targets for development of antimicrobial and antiviral therapeutics. Recent experimental evidence indicated that dichlorophenyl (DCP)-pyridine “BOS” drugs (e.g., BOS-318) competitively inhibit human furin by an induced-fit mechanism in which tryptophan W254 in the furin catalytic cleft (FCC) functions as a molecular gate, rotating nearly 180(o) through a steep energy barrier about its chi-1 dihedral to an “open” orientation, exposing a buried (i.e., cryptic) hydrophobic pocket (1). Once exposed, the non-polar DCP group of BOS-318, and similar halo-phenyl groups of analogs, enter the cryptic pocket, stabilizing drug binding. Here, we demonstrate flexible-receptor docking of BOS-318 (and various analogs) was unable to emulate the induced-fit motif, even when tryptophan was replaced with less bulky phenylalanine or glycine. While either substitution allowed access to the hydrophobic pocket for most ligands tested, optimal binding was observed only for W254, inferring a stabilizing effect of the indole sidechain. Furthermore, non-equilibrium steered molecular dynamics (sMD) in which the bound drugs (or their fragments) were extracted from the FCC did not cause closure of the open W254 gate, consistent with the thermodynamic stability of the open or closed W254 orientations. Finally, interactive molecular dynamics (iMD) revealed two putative conduits of drug entry and binding into the FCC, each coupled with W254 dihedral rotation and opening of the cryptic pocket. The iMD simulations further revealed ligand entry and binding in the FCC is likely driven in part by energy fluxes stemming from disruption and re-formation of ligand and protein solvation shells during drug migration from the solution phase into the FCC. Research Network of Computational and Structural Biotechnology 2023-09-09 /pmc/articles/PMC10561063/ /pubmed/37817778 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.csbj.2023.09.003 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Ridgway, Harry
Orbell, John D.
Matsoukas, Minos-Timotheos
Kelaidonis, Konstantinos
Moore, Graham J.
Tsiodras, Sotiris
Gorgoulis, Vasilis G.
Chasapis, Christos T.
Apostolopoulos, Vasso
Matsoukas, John M.
W254 in furin functions as a molecular gate promoting anti-viral drug binding: Elucidation of putative drug tunneling and docking by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics
title W254 in furin functions as a molecular gate promoting anti-viral drug binding: Elucidation of putative drug tunneling and docking by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics
title_full W254 in furin functions as a molecular gate promoting anti-viral drug binding: Elucidation of putative drug tunneling and docking by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics
title_fullStr W254 in furin functions as a molecular gate promoting anti-viral drug binding: Elucidation of putative drug tunneling and docking by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics
title_full_unstemmed W254 in furin functions as a molecular gate promoting anti-viral drug binding: Elucidation of putative drug tunneling and docking by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics
title_short W254 in furin functions as a molecular gate promoting anti-viral drug binding: Elucidation of putative drug tunneling and docking by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics
title_sort w254 in furin functions as a molecular gate promoting anti-viral drug binding: elucidation of putative drug tunneling and docking by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10561063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37817778
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.csbj.2023.09.003
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