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1.
ACS Pharmacol Transl Sci ; 5(4): 255-265, 2022 Apr 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35434531

RÉSUMÉ

Inhibition of the SARS-CoV-2 main protease (Mpro) is a major focus of drug discovery efforts against COVID-19. Here we report a hit expansion of non-covalent inhibitors of Mpro. Starting from a recently discovered scaffold (The COVID Moonshot Consortium. Open Science Discovery of Oral Non-Covalent SARS-CoV-2 Main Protease Inhibitor Therapeutics. bioRxiv 2020.10.29.339317) represented by an isoquinoline series, we searched a database of over a billion compounds using a cheminformatics molecular fingerprinting approach. We identified and tested 48 compounds in enzyme inhibition assays, of which 21 exhibited inhibitory activity above 50% at 20 µM. Among these, four compounds with IC50 values around 1 µM were found. Interestingly, despite the large search space, the isoquinolone motif was conserved in each of these four strongest binders. Room-temperature X-ray structures of co-crystallized protein-inhibitor complexes were determined up to 1.9 Å resolution for two of these compounds as well as one of the stronger inhibitors in the original isoquinoline series, revealing essential interactions with the binding site and water molecules. Molecular dynamics simulations and quantum chemical calculations further elucidate the binding interactions as well as electrostatic effects on ligand binding. The results help explain the strength of this new non-covalent scaffold for Mpro inhibition and inform lead optimization efforts for this series, while demonstrating the effectiveness of a high-throughput computational approach to expanding a pharmacophore library.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 16(43): 24026-33, 2014 Nov 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25285653

RÉSUMÉ

Control of the reactivity of the nickel center of the [NiFe] hydrogenase and other metalloproteins commonly involves outer coordination sphere ligands that act to modify the geometry and physical properties of the active site metal centers. We carried out a combined set of classical molecular dynamics and quantum/classical mechanics calculations to provide quantitative estimates of how dynamic fluctuations of the active site within the protein matrix modulate the electronic structure at the catalytic center. Specifically we focused on the dynamics of the inner and outer coordination spheres of the cysteinate-bound Ni-Fe cluster in the catalytically active Ni-C state. There are correlated movements of the cysteinate ligands and the surrounding hydrogen-bonding network, which modulate the electron affinity at the active site and the proton affinity of a terminal cysteinate. On the basis of these findings, we hypothesize a coupling between protein dynamics and electron and proton transfer reactions critical to dihydrogen production.

3.
J Phys Chem B ; 118(29): 8505-12, 2014 Jul 24.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24975678

RÉSUMÉ

The staggered cross decaheme configuration of electron transfer cofactors in the outer-membrane cytochrome MtrF serves as a prototype for conformationally gated multiheme electron transport. Derived from the bacterium Shewanella oneidensis, the staggered cross configuration reveals intersecting c-type octaheme and tetraheme "wires" containing thermodynamic "hills" and "valleys" (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 2014, 11, 611-616), suggesting that the protein structure may include a dynamical mechanism for conductance and pathway switching depending on enzymatic functional need. Here, we applied classical molecular and statistical mechanics calculations of large-amplitude protein dynamics in MtrF, to address its potential to modulate pathway conductance, including assessment of the effect of the total charge state. Explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulations of fully oxidized and fully reduced MtrF showed that the slowest mode of collective decaheme motion is 90% similar between the oxidized and reduced states and consists primarily of interheme separation with minor rotational contributions. The frequency of this motion is 1.7 × 10(7) s(-1), both for fully oxidized and fully reduced MtrF, slower than the downhill electron transfer rates between stacked heme pairs at the octaheme termini and faster than the electron transfer rates between parallel hemes in the tetraheme chain. This implies that MtrF uses slow conformational fluctuations to modulate electron flow along the octaheme pathway, apparently for the purpose of increasing the residence time of electrons on lowest potential hemes 4 and 9. This apparent gating mechanism should increase the success rate of electron transfer from MtrF to low potential environmental acceptors via these two solvent-exposed hemes.


Sujet(s)
Cytochromes/composition chimique , Cytochromes/métabolisme , Hème/métabolisme , Simulation de dynamique moléculaire , Shewanella/enzymologie , Transport d'électrons , Cinétique , Mouvement , Conformation des protéines , Thermodynamique
4.
Biophys J ; 103(7): 1576-84, 2012 Oct 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23062350

RÉSUMÉ

Calmodulin (CaM) is a highly flexible calcium-binding protein that mediates signal transduction through an ability to differentially bind to highly variable binding sequences in target proteins. To identify how binding affects CaM motions, and its relationship to conformational entropy and target peptide sequence, we have employed fully atomistic, explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulations of unbound CaM and CaM bound to five different target peptides. The calculated CaM conformational binding entropies correlate with experimentally derived conformational entropies with a correlation coefficient R(2) of 0.95. Selected side-chain interactions with target peptides restrain interhelical loop motions, acting to tune the conformational entropy of the bound complex via widely distributed CaM motions. In the complex with the most conformational entropy retention (CaM in complex with the neuronal nitric oxide synthase binding sequence), Lys-148 at the C-terminus of CaM forms transient salt bridges alternating between Glu side chains in the N-domain, the central linker, and the binding target. Additional analyses of CaM structures, fluctuations, and CaM-target interactions illuminate the interplay between electrostatic, side chain, and backbone properties in the ability of CaM to recognize and discriminate against targets by tuning its conformational entropy, and suggest a need to consider conformational dynamics in optimizing binding affinities.


Sujet(s)
Calmoduline/composition chimique , Calmoduline/métabolisme , Entropie , Simulation de dynamique moléculaire , Peptides/métabolisme , Électricité statique , Liaison hydrogène , Concentration osmolaire , Liaison aux protéines , Structure secondaire des protéines
5.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 8(6): 2103-14, 2012 Jun 12.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26593842

RÉSUMÉ

Classical molecular force-field parameters describing the structure and motion of metal clusters in [NiFe] hydrogenase enzymes can be used to compare the dynamics and thermodynamics of [NiFe] under different oxidation, protonation, and ligation circumstances. Using density functional theory (DFT) calculations of small model clusters representative of the active site and the proximal, medial, and distal Fe/S metal centers and their attached protein side chains, we have calculated classical force-field parameters for [NiFe] in reduced and oxidized states, including internal coordinates, force constants, and atom-centered charges. Derived force constants revealed that cysteinate ligands bound to the metal ions are more flexible in the Ni-B active site, which has a bridging hydroxide ligand, than in the Ni-C active site, which has a bridging hydride. Ten nanosecond all-atom, explicit-solvent MD simulations of [NiFe] hydrogenase in oxidized and reduced catalytic states established the stability of the derived force-field parameters in terms of Cα and metal cluster fluctuations. Average active site structures from the protein MD simulations are consistent with [NiFe] structures from the Protein Data Bank, suggesting that the derived force-field parameters are transferrable to other hydrogenases beyond the structure used for testing. A comparison of experimental H2-production rates demonstrated a relationship between cysteinate side chain rotation and activity, justifying the use of a fully dynamic model of [NiFe] metal cluster motion.

6.
J Phys Chem B ; 110(31): 15582-8, 2006 Aug 10.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16884282

RÉSUMÉ

A method for calculating the electron-transfer matrix element V(RP) using density functional theory Kohn-Sham orbitals is presented and applied to heme dimers of varying relative orientation. The electronic coupling decays with increased iron separation according to V(RP) = V(0)(RP)exp(-beta r/2) with a distance dependence parameter beta approximately 2 A(-1) for hemes with parallel porphyrins and either 1.1 or 4.0 A(-1) when the porphyrin planes are perpendicular, depending on the alignment of the iron d(pi) orbital. These findings are used to interpret the observed orientation of the hemes in tetraheme redox proteins such as Flavocytochrome c(3) fumarate reductase (Ifc(3), PDB code 1QJD) of Shewanella frigidimarina, another flavocytochrome from the same bacterium (Fcc(3), 1E39) and a small tetraheme cytochrome of Shewanella oneidensis strain MR1 (1M1P). Our results show that shifting and rotating the hemes controls the adiabaticity of the three electron hopping steps.


Sujet(s)
Cytochromes de type c/composition chimique , Hème/composition chimique , Succinate Dehydrogenase/composition chimique , Simulation numérique , Électrons , Modèles chimiques , Modèles moléculaires , Conformation des protéines , Théorie quantique , Shewanella/enzymologie
7.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 274(2): 442-50, 2004 Jun 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15144815

RÉSUMÉ

The rate of reaction of hematite with quinones and the quinone moieties of larger molecules may be an important factor in limiting the rate of reductive dissolution of hematite, especially by iron-reducing bacteria. It is possible that the rate of reductive dissolution of hematite in the presence of excess hydroquinone at pH 2.5 may be limited by the electron-transfer rate. Here, a reductive dissolution rate was measured and compared to electron-transfer rates calculated using Marcus theory. An experimental rate constant was measured at 9.5 x 10 (-6) s(-1) and the reaction order with respect to the hematite concentration was found to be 1.1. Both the dissolution rate and the reaction order of hematite concentration compare well with previous measurements. Of the Marcus theory calculations, the inner-sphere part of the reorganization energy and the electronic coupling matrix element for hydroquinone self-exchange electron transfer are calculated using ab initio methods. The second order self-exchange rate constant was calculated to be 1.3 x 10 (7) M(-1)s(-1), which compares well with experimental measurements. Using previously published data calculated for hexaquairon(III)/(II), the calculated electron-transfer rate for the cross reaction with hydroquinone also compares well to experimental measurements. A hypothetical reductive dissolution rate is calculated using the first-order electron-transfer rate constant and the concentration of total adsorbed quinone. Three different models of the hematite surface are used as well as multiple estimates for the reduction potential, the surface charge, and the adsorption density of hydroquinone. No calculated dissolution rate is less than five orders of magnitude faster than the experimentally measured one.

8.
J Am Chem Soc ; 125(9): 2711-7, 2003 Mar 05.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12603159

RÉSUMÉ

Ferric and ferrous hemes, such as those present in electron transfer proteins, often have low-lying spin states that are very close in energy. To explore the relationship between spin state, geometry, and cytochrome electron transfer, we investigate, using density functional theory, the relative energies, electronic structure, and optimized geometries for a high- and low-spin ferric and ferrous heme model complex. Our model consists of an iron-porphyrin axially ligated by two imidazoles, which model the interaction of a heme with histidine residues. Using the B3LYP hybrid functional, we found that, in the ferric model heme complex, the doublet is lower in energy than the sextet by 8.4 kcal/mol and the singlet ferrous heme is 6.7 kcal/mol more stable than the quintet. The difference between the high-spin ferric and ferrous model heme energies yields an adiabatic electron affinity (AEA) of 5.24 eV, and the low-spin AEA is 5.17 eV. Both values are large enough to ensure electron trapping, and electronic structure analysis indicates that the iron d(pi) orbital is involved in the electron transfer between hemes. Mössbauer parameters calculated to verify the B3LYP electronic structure correlate very well with experimental values. Isotropic hyperfine coupling constants for the ligand nitrogen atoms were also evaluated. The optimized geometries of the ferric and ferrous hemes are consistent with structures from X-ray crystallography and reveal that the iron-imidazole distances are significantly longer in the high-spin hemes, which suggests that the protein environment, modeled here by the imidazoles, plays an important role in regulating the spin state. Iron-imidazole dissociation energies, force constants, and harmonic frequencies were calculated for the ferric and ferrous low-spin and high-spin hemes. In both the ferric and the ferrous cases, a single imidazole ligand is more easily dissociated from the high-spin hemes.


Sujet(s)
Hémoprotéines/composition chimique , Histidine/composition chimique , Imidazoles/composition chimique , Fer/composition chimique , Modèles moléculaires , Spectroscopie Mossbauer , Thermodynamique
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