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Ritonavir and xk263 Binding-Unbinding with HIV-1 Protease: Pathways, Energy and Comparison

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 designi...

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Autores principales: Sun, Jianan, Raymundo, Mark Anthony V., Chang, Chia-En A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8779838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35054509
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12010116
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author Sun, Jianan
Raymundo, Mark Anthony V.
Chang, Chia-En A.
author_facet Sun, Jianan
Raymundo, Mark Anthony V.
Chang, Chia-En A.
author_sort Sun, Jianan
collection PubMed
description 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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spelling pubmed-87798382022-01-22 Ritonavir and xk263 Binding-Unbinding with HIV-1 Protease: Pathways, Energy and Comparison Sun, Jianan Raymundo, Mark Anthony V. Chang, Chia-En A. Life (Basel) Article 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. MDPI 2022-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC8779838/ /pubmed/35054509 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12010116 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sun, Jianan
Raymundo, Mark Anthony V.
Chang, Chia-En A.
Ritonavir and xk263 Binding-Unbinding with HIV-1 Protease: Pathways, Energy and Comparison
title Ritonavir and xk263 Binding-Unbinding with HIV-1 Protease: Pathways, Energy and Comparison
title_full Ritonavir and xk263 Binding-Unbinding with HIV-1 Protease: Pathways, Energy and Comparison
title_fullStr Ritonavir and xk263 Binding-Unbinding with HIV-1 Protease: Pathways, Energy and Comparison
title_full_unstemmed Ritonavir and xk263 Binding-Unbinding with HIV-1 Protease: Pathways, Energy and Comparison
title_short Ritonavir and xk263 Binding-Unbinding with HIV-1 Protease: Pathways, Energy and Comparison
title_sort ritonavir and xk263 binding-unbinding with hiv-1 protease: pathways, energy and comparison
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8779838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35054509
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12010116
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