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Protein conformational flexibility modulates kinetics and thermodynamics of drug binding.


ABSTRACT: Structure-based drug design has often been restricted by the rather static picture of protein-ligand complexes presented by crystal structures, despite the widely accepted importance of protein flexibility in biomolecular recognition. Here we report a detailed experimental and computational study of the drug target, human heat shock protein 90, to explore the contribution of protein dynamics to the binding thermodynamics and kinetics of drug-like compounds. We observe that their binding properties depend on whether the protein has a loop or a helical conformation in the binding site of the ligand-bound state. Compounds bound to the helical conformation display slow association and dissociation rates, high-affinity and high cellular efficacy, and predominantly entropically driven binding. An important entropic contribution comes from the greater flexibility of the helical relative to the loop conformation in the ligand-bound state. This unusual mechanism suggests increasing target flexibility in the bound state by ligand design as a new strategy for drug discovery.

SUBMITTER: Amaral M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5741624 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Protein conformational flexibility modulates kinetics and thermodynamics of drug binding.

Amaral M M   Kokh D B DB   Bomke J J   Wegener A A   Buchstaller H P HP   Eggenweiler H M HM   Matias P P   Sirrenberg C C   Wade R C RC   Frech M M  

Nature communications 20171222 1


Structure-based drug design has often been restricted by the rather static picture of protein-ligand complexes presented by crystal structures, despite the widely accepted importance of protein flexibility in biomolecular recognition. Here we report a detailed experimental and computational study of the drug target, human heat shock protein 90, to explore the contribution of protein dynamics to the binding thermodynamics and kinetics of drug-like compounds. We observe that their binding properti  ...[more]

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