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1.
Nat Rev Chem ; 7(11): 752-753, 2023 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37880428
2.
J Med Chem ; 66(13): 8666-8686, 2023 07 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37403966

RESUMEN

Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) are heterodimeric transcription factors induced in diverse pathophysiological settings. Inhibition of HIF-2α has become a strategy for cancer treatment since the discovery that small molecules, upon binding into a small cavity of the HIF-2α PAS B domain, can alter its conformation and disturb the activity of the HIF dimer complex. Herein, the design, synthesis, and systematic SAR exploration of cycloalkyl[c]thiophenes as novel HIF-2α inhibitors are described, providing the first chemotype featuring an alkoxy-aryl scaffold. X-ray data confirmed the ability of these inhibitors to induce perturbation of key amino acids by appropriately presenting key pharmacophoric elements in the hydrophobic cavity. Selected compounds showed inhibition of VEGF-A secretion in cancer cells and prevention of Arg1 expression and activity in IL4-stimulated macrophages. Moreover, in vivo target gene modulation was demonstrated with compound 35r. Thus, the disclosed HIF-2α inhibitors represent valuable tools for investigating selective HIF-2α inhibition and its effect on tumor biology.


Asunto(s)
Factores de Transcripción con Motivo Hélice-Asa-Hélice Básico , Tiofenos , Humanos , Factores de Transcripción con Motivo Hélice-Asa-Hélice Básico/metabolismo , Tiofenos/farmacología , Factores de Transcripción , Hipoxia , Subunidad alfa del Factor 1 Inducible por Hipoxia
3.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36382113

RESUMEN

Free energy calculations are rapidly becoming indispensable in structure-enabled drug discovery programs. As new methods, force fields, and implementations are developed, assessing their expected accuracy on real-world systems (benchmarking) becomes critical to provide users with an assessment of the accuracy expected when these methods are applied within their domain of applicability, and developers with a way to assess the expected impact of new methodologies. These assessments require construction of a benchmark-a set of well-prepared, high quality systems with corresponding experimental measurements designed to ensure the resulting calculations provide a realistic assessment of expected performance when these methods are deployed within their domains of applicability. To date, the community has not yet adopted a common standardized benchmark, and existing benchmark reports suffer from a myriad of issues, including poor data quality, limited statistical power, and statistically deficient analyses, all of which can conspire to produce benchmarks that are poorly predictive of real-world performance. Here, we address these issues by presenting guidelines for (1) curating experimental data to develop meaningful benchmark sets, (2) preparing benchmark inputs according to best practices to facilitate widespread adoption, and (3) analysis of the resulting predictions to enable statistically meaningful comparisons among methods and force fields. We highlight challenges and open questions that remain to be solved in these areas, as well as recommendations for the collection of new datasets that might optimally serve to measure progress as methods become systematically more reliable. Finally, we provide a curated, versioned, open, standardized benchmark set adherent to these standards (PLBenchmarks) and an open source toolkit for implementing standardized best practices assessments (arsenic) for the community to use as a standardized assessment tool. While our main focus is free energy methods based on molecular simulations, these guidelines should prove useful for assessment of the rapidly growing field of machine learning methods for affinity prediction as well.

4.
J Chem Inf Model ; 62(23): 6094-6104, 2022 Dec 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36433835

RESUMEN

Force fields form the basis for classical molecular simulations, and their accuracy is crucial for the quality of, for instance, protein-ligand binding simulations in drug discovery. The huge diversity of small-molecule chemistry makes it a challenge to build and parameterize a suitable force field. The Open Force Field Initiative is a combined industry and academic consortium developing a state-of-the-art small-molecule force field. In this report, industry members of the consortium worked together to objectively evaluate the performance of the force fields (referred to here as OpenFF) produced by the initiative on a combined public and proprietary dataset of 19,653 relevant molecules selected from their internal research and compound collections. This evaluation was important because it was completely blind; at most partners, none of the molecules or data were used in force field development or testing prior to this work. We compare the Open Force Field "Sage" version 2.0.0 and "Parsley" version 1.3.0 with GAFF-2.11-AM1BCC, OPLS4, and SMIRNOFF99Frosst. We analyzed force-field-optimized geometries and conformer energies compared to reference quantum mechanical data. We show that OPLS4 performs best, and the latest Open Force Field release shows a clear improvement compared to its predecessors. The performance of established force fields such as GAFF-2.11 was generally worse. While OpenFF researchers were involved in building the benchmarking infrastructure used in this work, benchmarking was done entirely in-house within industrial organizations and the resulting assessment is reported here. This work assesses the force field performance using separate benchmarking steps, external datasets, and involving external research groups. This effort may also be unique in terms of the number of different industrial partners involved, with 10 different companies participating in the benchmark efforts.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas , Termodinámica , Ligandos , Proteínas/química , Fenómenos Físicos
5.
J Chem Inf Model ; 60(11): 5457-5474, 2020 11 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32813975

RESUMEN

Accurate ranking of compounds with regards to their binding affinity to a protein using computational methods is of great interest to pharmaceutical research. Physics-based free energy calculations are regarded as the most rigorous way to estimate binding affinity. In recent years, many retrospective studies carried out both in academia and industry have demonstrated its potential. Here, we present the results of large-scale prospective application of the FEP+ method in active drug discovery projects in an industry setting at Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany. We compare these prospective data to results obtained on a new diverse, public benchmark of eight pharmaceutically relevant targets. Our results offer insights into the challenges faced when using free energy calculations in real-life drug discovery projects and identify limitations that could be tackled by future method development. The new public data set we provide to the community can support further method development and comparative benchmarking of free energy calculations.


Asunto(s)
Descubrimiento de Drogas , Ligandos , Estudios Prospectivos , Estudios Retrospectivos , Termodinámica
6.
Protein Sci ; 28(6): 1048-1058, 2019 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30945368

RESUMEN

4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the second reaction in the tyrosine catabolism and is linked to the production of cofactors plastoquinone and tocopherol in plants. This important biological role has put HPPD in the focus of current herbicide design efforts including the development of herbicide-tolerant mutants. However, the molecular mechanisms of substrate binding and herbicide tolerance have yet to be elucidated. In this work, we performed molecular dynamics simulations and free energy calculations to characterize active site gating by the C-terminal helix H11 in HPPD. We compared gating equilibria in Arabidopsis thaliana (At) and Zea mays (Zm) wild-type proteins retrieving the experimentally observed preferred orientations from the simulations. We investigated the influence of substrate and product binding on the open-closed transition and discovered a ligand-mediated conformational switch in H11 that mediates rapid substrate access followed by active site closing and efficient product release through H11 opening. We further studied H11 gating in At mutant HPPD, and found large differences with correlation to experimentally measured herbicide tolerance. The computational findings were then used to design a new At mutant HPPD protein that showed increased tolerance to six commercially available HPPD inhibitors in biochemical in vitro experiments. Our results underline the importance of protein flexibility and conformational transitions in substrate recognition and enzyme inhibition by herbicides.


Asunto(s)
4-Hidroxifenilpiruvato Dioxigenasa/antagonistas & inhibidores , Inhibidores Enzimáticos/farmacología , Herbicidas/farmacología , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Mutación , Termodinámica , 4-Hidroxifenilpiruvato Dioxigenasa/genética , 4-Hidroxifenilpiruvato Dioxigenasa/metabolismo , Arabidopsis/enzimología , Sitios de Unión , Relación Dosis-Respuesta a Droga , Inhibidores Enzimáticos/química , Herbicidas/química , Modelos Moleculares , Estructura Molecular , Relación Estructura-Actividad , Especificidad por Sustrato , Zea mays/enzimología
7.
Structure ; 26(2): 282-294.e6, 2018 02 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29395785

RESUMEN

Chromatin remodeling factors assume critical roles by regulating access to nucleosomal DNA. To determine the architecture of the Drosophila ISWI remodeling enzyme, we developed an integrative structural approach that combines protein cross-linking, mass spectrometry, small-angle X-ray scattering, and computational modeling. The resulting structural model shows the ATPase module in a resting state with both ATPase lobes twisted against each other, providing support for a conformation that was recently trapped by crystallography. The autoinhibiting NegC region does not protrude from the ATPase module as suggested previously. The regulatory NTR domain is located near both ATPase lobes. The full-length enzyme is flexible and can adopt a compact structure in solution with the C-terminal HSS domain packing against the ATPase module. Our data imply a series of conformational changes upon activation of the enzyme and illustrate how the NTR, NegC, and HSS domains contribute to regulation of the ATPase module.


Asunto(s)
Adenosina Trifosfatasas/metabolismo , Ensamble y Desensamble de Cromatina/fisiología , Proteínas de Drosophila/metabolismo , Nucleosomas/metabolismo , Factores de Transcripción/metabolismo , Animales , Drosophila melanogaster , Espectrometría de Masas , Modelos Moleculares , Unión Proteica , Dispersión del Ángulo Pequeño , Difracción de Rayos X
8.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 45(W1): W361-W364, 2017 07 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28460116

RESUMEN

Peptide-protein interactions are ubiquitous in the cell and form an important part of the interactome. Computational docking methods can complement experimental characterization of these complexes, but current protocols are not applicable on the proteome scale. pepATTRACT is a novel docking protocol that is fully blind, i.e. it does not require any information about the binding site. In various stages of its development, pepATTRACT has participated in CAPRI, making successful predictions for five out of seven protein-peptide targets. Its performance is similar or better than state-of-the-art local docking protocols that do require binding site information. Here we present a novel web server that carries out the rigid-body stage of pepATTRACT. On the peptiDB benchmark, the web server generates a correct model in the top 50 in 34% of the cases. Compared to the full pepATTRACT protocol, this leads to some loss of performance, but the computation time is reduced from ∼18 h to ∼10 min. Combined with the fact that it is fully blind, this makes the web server well-suited for large-scale in silico protein-peptide docking experiments. The rigid-body pepATTRACT server is freely available at http://bioserv.rpbs.univ-paris-diderot.fr/services/pepATTRACT.


Asunto(s)
Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular/métodos , Péptidos/química , Proteínas/química , Programas Informáticos , Ciclofilina A/química , Internet , Conformación Proteica
9.
PLoS One ; 12(1): e0170625, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28118389

RESUMEN

Protein-protein docking protocols aim to predict the structures of protein-protein complexes based on the structure of individual partners. Docking protocols usually include several steps of sampling, clustering, refinement and re-scoring. The scoring step is one of the bottlenecks in the performance of many state-of-the-art protocols. The performance of scoring functions depends on the quality of the generated structures and its coupling to the sampling algorithm. A tool kit, GRADSCOPT (GRid Accelerated Directly SCoring OPTimizing), was designed to allow rapid development and optimization of different knowledge-based scoring potentials for specific objectives in protein-protein docking. Different atomistic and coarse-grained potentials can be created by a grid-accelerated directly scoring dependent Monte-Carlo annealing or by a linear regression optimization. We demonstrate that the scoring functions generated by our approach are similar to or even outperform state-of-the-art scoring functions for predicting near-native solutions. Of additional importance, we find that potentials specifically trained to identify the native bound complex perform rather poorly on identifying acceptable or medium quality (near-native) solutions. In contrast, atomistic long-range contact potentials can increase the average fraction of near-native poses by up to a factor 2.5 in the best scored 1% decoys (compared to existing scoring), emphasizing the need of specific docking potentials for different steps in the docking protocol.


Asunto(s)
Bases del Conocimiento , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular/métodos , Unión Proteica , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas/métodos , Algoritmos , Simulación por Computador , Modelos Lineales , Modelos Químicos , Modelos Moleculares , Método de Montecarlo , Conformación Proteica , Programas Informáticos
10.
Proteins ; 85(3): 391-398, 2017 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27785830

RESUMEN

The ATTRACT coarse-grained docking approach in combination with various types of atomistic, flexible refinement methods has been applied to predict protein-protein and peptide-protein complexes in CAPRI rounds 28-36. For a large fraction of CAPRI targets (12 out of 18), at least one model of acceptable or better quality was generated, corresponding to a success rate of 67%. In particular, for several peptide-protein complexes excellent predictions were achieved. In several cases, a combination of template-based modeling and extensive molecular dynamics-based refinement yielded medium and even high quality solutions. In one particularly challenging case, the structure of an ubiquitylation enzyme bound to the nucleosome was correctly predicted as a set of acceptable quality solutions. Based on the experience with the CAPRI targets, new interface refinement approaches and methods for ab-initio peptide-protein docking have been developed. Failures and possible improvements of the docking method with respect to scoring and protein flexibility will also be discussed. Proteins 2017; 85:391-398. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional/métodos , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular/métodos , Péptidos/química , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas/métodos , Proteínas/química , Algoritmos , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Benchmarking , Sitios de Unión , Unión Proteica , Conformación Proteica , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas/estadística & datos numéricos , Proyectos de Investigación , Programas Informáticos , Homología Estructural de Proteína
11.
Structure ; 24(8): 1387-1397, 2016 08 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27427479

RESUMEN

Modeling driven by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) combines low-resolution data with computational modeling to predict the structure of biomolecular assemblies. A new protocol, ATTRACT-SAXS, has been developed and tested on a large protein-protein docking benchmark with simulated SAXS data. For 88% of cases, high-quality solutions were generated using SAXS data alone without a physiochemical force field (interface-RMSD ≦ 2 Å or ligand-RMSD ≦ 5 Å; and more than 30% native contacts). ATTRACT-SAXS gave significant improvements compared with previous approaches that filter by SAXS a posteriori. When combining SAXS and interface properties for scoring, the protocol placed high-quality models in 70% of cases among the top-ranked 100 clusters. ATTRACT-SAXS also gave good results when tested on experimental data if the native complex structure was compatible with the SAXS profile. Our results show that, in principle, SAXS on its own can contain enough information to generate high-quality models of protein-protein complexes.


Asunto(s)
Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas/estadística & datos numéricos , Proteínas/química , Programas Informáticos , Animales , Benchmarking , Humanos , Conformación Proteica , Dispersión del Ángulo Pequeño , Difracción de Rayos X
12.
Biophys J ; 110(4): 785-97, 2016 Feb 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26846888

RESUMEN

Protein-protein interactions carry out a large variety of essential cellular processes. Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) is a powerful technique for the modeling of protein-protein interactions at a wide range of resolutions, and recent developments have caused a revolution in the field. At low resolution, cryo-EM maps can drive integrative modeling of the interaction, assembling existing structures into the map. Other experimental techniques can provide information on the interface or on the contacts between the monomers in the complex. This inevitably raises the question regarding which type of data is best suited to drive integrative modeling approaches. Systematic comparison of the prediction accuracy and specificity of the different integrative modeling paradigms is unavailable to date. Here, we compare EM-driven, interface-driven, and contact-driven integrative modeling paradigms. Models were generated for the protein docking benchmark using the ATTRACT docking engine and evaluated using the CAPRI two-star criterion. At 20 Å resolution, EM-driven modeling achieved a success rate of 100%, outperforming the other paradigms even with perfect interface and contact information. Therefore, even very low resolution cryo-EM data is superior in predicting heterodimeric and heterotrimeric protein assemblies. Our study demonstrates that a force field is not necessary, cryo-EM data alone is sufficient to accurately guide the monomers into place. The resulting rigid models successfully identify regions of conformational change, opening up perspectives for targeted flexible remodeling.


Asunto(s)
Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular/métodos , Proteínas/química , Proteínas/metabolismo , Unión Proteica , Conformación Proteica
13.
Structure ; 23(8): 1507-1515, 2015 Aug 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26146186

RESUMEN

Peptide-protein interactions are ubiquitous in the cell and form an important part of the interactome. Computational docking methods can complement experimental characterization of these complexes, but current protocols are not applicable on the proteome scale. Here, we present a new fully blind flexible peptide-protein docking protocol, pepATTRACT, which combines a rapid coarse-grained global peptide docking search of the entire protein surface with a two-stage atomistic flexible refinement. Global unbound-unbound docking yielded near-native models for 70% of the docking cases when testing the protocol on the largest benchmark of peptide-protein complexes available to date. This performance is similar to that of state-of-the-art local docking protocols that rely on information about the binding site. Upon restricting the search to the peptide binding region, the resulting pepATTRACT-local approach outperformed existing methods. Docking scripts for pepATTRACT and pepATTRACT-local can be generated via a web interface at www.attract.ph.tum.de/peptide.html.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular/métodos , Proteínas/química , Benchmarking , Sitios de Unión , Unión Proteica , Conformación Proteica , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas
14.
PLoS One ; 10(6): e0125941, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26053419

RESUMEN

The high-resolution refinement of docked protein-protein complexes can provide valuable structural and mechanistic insight into protein complex formation complementing experiment. Monte Carlo (MC) based approaches are frequently applied to sample putative interaction geometries of proteins including also possible conformational changes of the binding partners. In order to explore efficiency improvements of the MC sampling, several enhanced sampling techniques, including temperature or Hamiltonian replica exchange and well-tempered ensemble approaches, have been combined with the MC method and were evaluated on 20 protein complexes using unbound partner structures. The well-tempered ensemble method combined with a 2-dimensional temperature and Hamiltonian replica exchange scheme (WTE-H-REMC) was identified as the most efficient search strategy. Comparison with prolonged MC searches indicates that the WTE-H-REMC approach requires approximately 5 times fewer MC steps to identify near native docking geometries compared to conventional MC searches.


Asunto(s)
Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Método de Montecarlo , Proteínas/química , Programas Informáticos , Conformación Proteica , Termodinámica , Flujo de Trabajo
15.
Biophys J ; 108(3): 462-5, 2015 Feb 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25650913

RESUMEN

Protein-protein docking programs can give valuable insights into the structure of protein complexes in the absence of an experimental complex structure. Web interfaces can facilitate the use of docking programs by structural biologists. Here, we present an easy web interface for protein-protein docking with the ATTRACT program. While aimed at nonexpert users, the web interface still covers a considerable range of docking applications. The web interface supports systematic rigid-body protein docking with the ATTRACT coarse-grained force field, as well as various kinds of protein flexibility. The execution of a docking protocol takes up to a few hours on a standard desktop computer.


Asunto(s)
Internet , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas/métodos , Programas Informáticos , Interfaz Usuario-Computador , Animales , Quimiocina CCL2/metabolismo , Ratones , Modelos Moleculares , Unión Proteica , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo
16.
Proteins ; 83(2): 248-58, 2015 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25402278

RESUMEN

Protein-protein interactions are abundant in the cell but to date structural data for a large number of complexes is lacking. Computational docking methods can complement experiments by providing structural models of complexes based on structures of the individual partners. A major caveat for docking success is accounting for protein flexibility. Especially, interface residues undergo significant conformational changes upon binding. This limits the performance of docking methods that keep partner structures rigid or allow limited flexibility. A new docking refinement approach, iATTRACT, has been developed which combines simultaneous full interface flexibility and rigid body optimizations during docking energy minimization. It employs an atomistic molecular mechanics force field for intermolecular interface interactions and a structure-based force field for intramolecular contributions. The approach was systematically evaluated on a large protein-protein docking benchmark, starting from an enriched decoy set of rigidly docked protein-protein complexes deviating by up to 15 Å from the native structure at the interface. Large improvements in sampling and slight but significant improvements in scoring/discrimination of near native docking solutions were observed. Complexes with initial deviations at the interface of up to 5.5 Å were refined to significantly better agreement with the native structure. Improvements in the fraction of native contacts were especially favorable, yielding increases of up to 70%.


Asunto(s)
Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Complejos Multiproteicos/química , Unión Proteica , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína , Programas Informáticos
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