Steered molecular dynamics simulation on the binding of NNRTI to HIV-1 RT

被引:84
作者
Shen, LL
Shen, JH
Luo, XM
Cheng, F
Xu, YC
Chen, KX
Arnold, E
Ding, JP
Jiang, HL [1 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Shanghai Inst Biol Sci, Shanghai Inst Mat Med, State Key Lab Drug Res,Ctr Drug Discovery & Desig, Shanghai 200031, Peoples R China
[2] Chinese Acad Sci, Shanghai Inst Biol Sci, Key Lab Proteom, Shanghai Inst Biochem & Cell Biol, Shanghai 200031, Peoples R China
[3] Rutgers State Univ, Ctr Adv Biotechnol & Med, Piscataway, NJ 08854 USA
[4] Rutgers State Univ, Dept Chem & Chem Biol, Piscataway, NJ 08854 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0006-3495(03)75088-7
中图分类号
Q6 [生物物理学];
学科分类号
071011 ;
摘要
HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) is the primary target for anti-AIDS chemotherapy. Nonnucleoside RT inhibitors (NNRTIs) are very potent and most promising anti-AIDS drugs that specifically inhibit HIV-1 RT. The binding and unbinding processes of alpha-APA, an NNRTI, have been studied using nanosecond conventional molecular dynamics and steered molecular dynamics simulations. The simulation results show that the unbinding process of alpha-APA consists of three phases based on the position of alpha-APA in relation to the entrance of the binding pocket. When alpha-APA is bound in the binding pocket, the hydrophobic interactions between HIV-1 RT and alpha-APA dominate the binding; however, the hydrophilic interactions (both direct and water-bridged hydrogen bonds) also contribute to the stabilizing forces. Whereas Tyr-181 makes significant hydrophobic interactions with alpha-APA, Tyr-188 forms a strong hydrogen bond with the acylamino group (N14) of alpha-APA. These two residues have very flexible side chains and appear to act as two "flexible clamps" discouraging alpha-APA to dissociate from the binding pocket. At the pocket entrance, two relatively inflexible residues, Val-179 and Leu-100, gauge the openness of the entrance and form the bottleneck of the inhibitor-unbinding pathway. Two special water molecules at the pocket entrance appear to play important roles in inhibitor recognition of binding and unbinding. These water molecules form water bridges between the polar groups of the inhibitor and the residues around the entrance, and between the polar groups of the inhibitor themselves. The water-bridged interactions not only induce the inhibitor to adopt an energetically favorable conformation so the inhibitor can pass through the pocket entrance, but also stabilize the binding of the inhibitor in the pocket to prevent the inhibitor's dissociation. The complementary steered molecular dynamics and conventional molecular dynamics simulation results strongly support the hypothesis that NNRTIs inhibit HIV-1 RT polymerization activity by enlarging the DNA-binding cleft and restricting the flexibility and mobility of the p66 thumb subdomain that are believed to be essential during DNA translocation and polymerization.
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页码:3547 / 3563
页数:17
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