Docking is a computational technique that samples conformations of small molecules in protein binding sites; scoring functions are used to assess which of these conformations best complements the protein binding site. An evaluation of 10 docking programs and 37 scoring functions was conducted against eight proteins of seven protein types for three tasks: binding mode prediction, virtual screening for lead identification, and rank-ordering by affinity for lead optimization. All of the docking programs were able to generate ligand conformations similar to crystallographically determined protein/ligand complex structures for at least one of the targets. However, scoring functions were less successful at distinguishing the crystallographic conformation from the set of docked poses. Docking programs identified active compounds from a pharmaceutically relevant pool of decoy compounds; however, no single program performed well for all of the targets. For prediction of compound affinity, none of the docking programs or scoring functions made a useful prediction of ligand binding affinity.
Nb-containing polyoxometalates (POMs) of the Wells-Dawson class inhibit HIV-1 protease (HIV-1P) by a new mode based on kinetics, binding, and molecular modeling studies. Reaction of alpha(1)-K(9)Li[P(2)W(17)O(61)] or alpha(2)-K(10)[P(2)W(17)O(61)] with aqueous H(2)O(2) solutions of K(7)H[Nb(6)O(19)] followed by treatment with HCl and KCl and then crystallization affords the complexes alpha(1)-K(7)[P(2)W(17)(NbO(2))O(61)] (alpha(1)()1) and alpha(2)-K(7)[P(2)W(17)(NbO(2))O(61)] (alpha(2)()1) in 63 and 86% isolated yields, respectively. Thermolysis of the crude peroxoniobium compounds (72-96 h in refluxing H(2)O) prior to treatment with KCl converts the peroxoniobium compounds to the corresponding polyoxometalates (POMs), alpha(1)-K(7)[P(2)W(17)NbO(62)] (alpha(1)()2) and alpha(2)-K(7)[P(2)W(17)NbO(62)] (alpha(2)()2), in moderate yields (66 and 52%, respectively). The identity and high purity of all four compounds were confirmed by (31)P NMR and (183)W NMR. The acid-induced dimerization of the oxo complexes differentiates sterically between the cap (alpha(2)) site and the belt (alpha(1)) site in the Wells-Dawson structure (alpha(2)()2 dimerizes in high yield; alpha(1)()2 does not). All four POMs exhibit high activity in cell culture against HIV-1 (EC(50) values of 0.17-0.83 microM), are minimally toxic (IC(50) values of 50 to >100 microM), and selectively inhibit purified HIV-1 protease (HIV-1P) (IC(50) values for alpha(1)()1, alpha(2)()1, alpha(1)()2, and alpha(2)()2 of 2.0, 1.2, 1.5, and 1.8 microM, respectively). Thus, theoretical, binding, and kinetics studies of the POM/HIV-1P interaction(s) were conducted. Parameters for [P(2)W(17)NbO(62)](7)(-) were determined for the Kollman all-atom (KAA) force field in Sybyl 6.2. Charges for the POM were obtained from natural population analysis (NPA) at the HF/LANL2DZ level of theory. AutoDock 2.2 was used to explore possible binding locations for the POM with HIV-1P. These computational studies strongly suggest that the POMs function not by binding to the active site of HIV-1P, the mode of inhibition of all other HIV-1P protease inhibitors, but by binding to a cationic pocket on the "hinge" region of the flaps covering the active site (2 POMs and cationic pockets per active homodimer of HIV-1P). The kinetics and binding studies, conducted after the molecular modeling, are both in remarkable agreement with the modeling results: 2 POMs bind per HIV-1P homodimer with high affinities (K(i) = 1.1 +/- 0.5 and 4.1 +/- 1.8 nM in 0.1 and 1.0 M NaCl, respectively) and inhibition is noncompetitive (k(cat) but not K(m) is affected by the POM concentration).
Centromere-associated protein-E (CENP-E) is a kinetochore-associated mitotic kinesin that is thought to function as the key receptor responsible for mitotic checkpoint signal transduction after interaction with spindle microtubules. We have identified GSK923295, an allosteric inhibitor of CENP-E kinesin motor ATPase activity, and mapped the inhibitor binding site to a region similar to that bound by loop-5 inhibitors of the kinesin KSP/Eg5. Unlike these KSP inhibitors, which block release of ADP and destabilize motor-microtubule interaction, GSK923295 inhibited release of inorganic phosphate and stabilized CENP-E motor domain interaction with microtubules. Inhibition of CENP-E motor activity in cultured cells and tumor xenografts caused failure of metaphase chromosome alignment and induced mitotic arrest, indicating that tight binding of CENP-E to microtubules is insufficient to satisfy the mitotic checkpoint. Consistent with genetic studies in mice suggesting that decreased CENP-E function can have a tumor-suppressive effect, inhibition of CENP-E induced tumor cell apoptosis and tumor regression.entromere-associated protein-E (CENP-E; kinesin-7) is a kinetochore-associated kinesin motor protein with an essential and exclusive role in metaphase chromosome alignment and satisfaction of the mitotic checkpoint (1). CENP-E is a likely candidate to integrate the mechanics of kinetochore-microtubule interaction with the mitotic checkpoint signaling machinery responsible for restraining cell-cycle progression into anaphase. CENP-E is a large dimeric protein consisting of an N-terminal kinesin motor domain tethered to a globular C-terminal domain through an extended coiled-coil rod domain (2, 3). The C-terminal, noncatalytic region of CENP-E is not only sufficient to specify localization to kinetochores, but it also mediates interaction of CENP-E with the serine/threonine kinase BubR1, a key effector of mitotic checkpoint signaling that forms complexes with the checkpoint proteins Cdc20, Bub3, and Mad2 to inhibit the ubiquitin ligase activity of the anaphase promoting complex APC/C CDC20 (4-7). The combined interaction of CENP-E with microtubules and a key regulator of APC/C CDC20 has led to the hypothesis that CENP-E functions as the key kinetochore microtubule receptor responsible for silencing mitotic checkpoint signal transduction after capture of spindle microtubules. This hypothesis was further strengthened by the finding that CENP-E could stimulate the kinase activity of BubR1 in a microtubule-sensitive manner (8, 9). In vitro, the addition of CENP-E to BubR1 resulted in a stimulation of BubR1 kinase activity. The addition of microtubules suppressed this stimulatory activity, an effect thought to be mediated by the CENP-E kinesin motor domain. Although the importance of CENP-E interaction with BubR1 and the role of BubR1-mediated phosphorylation in mitotic checkpoint function remain unclear, CENP-E remains a prominent candidate to play a key role in mitotic checkpoint signal transduction.Depletion of CENP-E from ...
Although therapeutic interventions of signal-transduction cascades with targeted kinase inhibitors are a well-established strategy, drug-discovery efforts to identify targeted phosphatase inhibitors have proven challenging. Herein we report a series of allosteric, small-molecule inhibitors of wild-type p53-induced phosphatase (Wip1), an oncogenic phosphatase common to multiple cancers. Compound binding to Wip1 is dependent on a 'flap' subdomain located near the Wip1 catalytic site that renders Wip1 structurally divergent from other members of the protein phosphatase 2C (PP2C) family and that thereby confers selectivity for Wip1 over other phosphatases. Treatment of tumor cells with the inhibitor GSK2830371 increases phosphorylation of Wip1 substrates and causes growth inhibition in both hematopoietic tumor cell lines and Wip1-amplified breast tumor cells harboring wild-type TP53. Oral administration of Wip1 inhibitors in mice results in expected pharmacodynamic effects and causes inhibition of lymphoma xenograft growth. To our knowledge, GSK2830371 is the first orally active, allosteric inhibitor of Wip1 phosphatase.
Druggability assessment of a target protein has emerged in recent years as an important concept in hit-to-lead optimization. A reliable and physically relevant measure of druggability would allow informed decisions on the risk of investing in a particular target. Here, we define “druggability” as a quantitative estimate of binding sites and affinities for a potential drug acting on a specific protein target. In the present study, we describe a new methodology that successfully predicts the druggability and maximal binding affinity for a series of challenging targets, including those that function through allosteric mechanisms. Two distinguishing features of the methodology are (i) simulation of the binding dynamics of a diversity of probe molecules selected on the basis of an analysis of approved drugs and (ii) identification of druggable sites and estimation of corresponding binding affinities on the basis of an evaluation of the geometry and energetics of bound probe clusters. The use of the methodology for a variety of targets such as murine double mutant-2, protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B), lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1, vertebrate kinesin-5 (Eg5), and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase provides examples for which the method correctly captures the location and binding affinities of known drugs. It also provides insights into novel druggable sites and the target’s structural changes that would accommodate, if not promote and stabilize, drug binding. Notably, the ability to identify high affinity spots even in challenging cases such as PTP1B or Eg5 shows promise as a rational tool for assessing the druggability of protein targets and identifying allosteric or novel sites for drug binding.
The Drug Design Data Resource aims to test and advance the state of the art in protein-ligand modeling, by holding community-wide blinded, prediction challenges. Here, we report on our third major round, Grand Challenge 3 (GC3). Held 2017-2018, GC3 centered on the protein Cathepsin S and the kinases VEGFR2, JAK2, p38-α, TIE2, and ABL1; and included both poseprediction and affinity-ranking components. GC3 was structured much like the prior challenges GC2015 and GC2. First, Stage 1 tested pose prediction and affinity ranking methods; then all available crystal structures were released, and Stage 2 tested only affinity rankings, now in the context of the available structures. Unique to GC3 was the addition of a Stage 1b self-docking subchallenge, in which the protein coordinates from all of the cocrystal structures used in the cross-docking challenge were released, and participants were asked to predict the pose of CatS ligands using these newly released structures. We provide an overview of the outcomes and discuss insights into trends and best-practices.
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