학술논문

Inhibition of protein interactions: co-crystalized protein-protein interfaces are nearly as good as holo proteins in rigid-body ligand docking.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Computer-Aided Molecular Design. Jul2018, Vol. 32 Issue 7, p769-779. 11p.
Subject
*PROTEIN-protein interactions
*INTERMOLECULAR interactions
*LIGANDS (Biochemistry)
*MOLECULAR docking
*DRUG design
Language
ISSN
0920-654X
Abstract
Modulating protein interaction pathways may lead to the cure of many diseases. Known protein-protein inhibitors bind to large pockets on the protein-protein interface. Such large pockets are detected also in the protein-protein complexes without known inhibitors, making such complexes potentially druggable. The inhibitor-binding site is primary defined by the side chains that form the largest pocket in the protein-bound conformation. Low-resolution ligand docking shows that the success rate for the protein-bound conformation is close to the one for the ligand-bound conformation, and significantly higher than for the apo conformation. The conformational change on the protein interface upon binding to the other protein results in a pocket employed by the ligand when it binds to that interface. This proof-of-concept study suggests that rather than using computational pocket-opening procedures, one can opt for an experimentally determined structure of the target co-crystallized protein-protein complex as a starting point for drug design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]