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The Importance of Structured Water in HDAC8 for Correct Binding Pose Applied for Drug Design of Anticancer Molecules.
Morales-Herrejón, Gerardo; Mendoza-Figueroa, Humberto Lubriel; Martínez-Archundía, Marlet; Correa-Basurto, José.
Afiliação
  • Morales-Herrejón G; Laboratorio de Diseño y Desarrollo de Nuevos Fármacos e Innovación Biotecnológica (Laboratory for the Design and Development of New Drugs and Biotechnological Innovation), Escuela Superior de Medicina, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, México City, Mexico Plan de San Luis Y Díaz Mirón S/N, Casco de Sa
  • Mendoza-Figueroa HL; Laboratorio de Diseño y Desarrollo de Nuevos Fármacos e Innovación Biotecnológica (Laboratory for the Design and Development of New Drugs and Biotechnological Innovation), Escuela Superior de Medicina, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, México City, Mexico Plan de San Luis Y Díaz Mirón S/N, Casco de Sa
  • Martínez-Archundía M; Laboratorio de Diseño y Desarrollo de Nuevos Fármacos e Innovación Biotecnológica (Laboratory for the Design and Development of New Drugs and Biotechnological Innovation), Escuela Superior de Medicina, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, México City, Mexico Plan de San Luis Y Díaz Mirón S/N, Casco de Sa
  • Correa-Basurto J; Laboratorio de Diseño y Desarrollo de Nuevos Fármacos e Innovación Biotecnológica (Laboratory for the Design and Development of New Drugs and Biotechnological Innovation), Escuela Superior de Medicina, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, México City, Mexico Plan de San Luis Y Díaz Mirón S/N, Casco de Sa
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38835122
ABSTRACT

AIMS:

Validating the docking procedure and maintaining the structural water molecules at HDAC8 catalytic site.

BACKGROUND:

Molecular docking simulations play a significant role in Computer-Aided Drug Design, contributing to the development of new molecules. To ensure the reliability of these simulations, a validation process called "Re-docking" is employed, focusing on the binding mode of a ligand co-crystallized with the protein of interest.

OBJECTIVE:

In this study, several molecular docking studies were conducted using five X-ray structures of HDAC8-ligand complexes from the PDB.

METHOD:

Ligands initially complexed with HDAC8 were removed and re-docked onto the free protein, revealing a poor reproduction of the expected binding mode. In response to this, we observed that most HDAC8-ligand complexes contained one to two water molecules in the catalytic site, which were crucial for maintaining the cocrystallized ligand.

RESULT:

These water molecules enhance the binding mode of the co-crystallized ligand by stabilizing the proteinligand complex through hydrogen bond interactions between ligand and water molecules. Notably, these interactions are lost if water molecules are removed, as is often done in classical docking methodologies. Considering this, molecular docking simulations were repeated, both with and without one or two conserved water molecules near Zn+2 in the catalytic cavity. Simulations indicated that replicating the native binding pose of co-crystallized ligands on free HDAC8 without these water molecules was challenging, showing greater coordinate displacements (RMSD) compared to those including conserved water molecules from crystals.

CONCLUSION:

The study highlighted the importance of conserved water molecules within the active site, as their presence significantly influenced the successful reproduction of the ligands' native binding modes. The results suggest an optimal molecular docking procedure for validating methods suitable for filtering new HDAC8 inhibitors for future experimental assays.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article