4.5 Article

Molecular Simulations of Multimodal Ligand-Protein Binding: Elucidation of Binding Sites and Correlation with Experiments

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 115, Issue 45, Pages 13320-13327

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp2038015

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CBET 0933169]
  2. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys
  3. Directorate For Engineering [0933169] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Multimodal chromatography, which employs more than one mode of interaction between ligands and proteins, has been shown to have unique selectivity and high efficacy for protein purification. To test the ability of free solution molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in explicit water to identify binding regions on the protein surface and to shed light on the pseudo affinity nature of multimodal interactions, we performed MD simulations of a model protein ubiquitin in aqueous solution of free ligands. Comparisons of MD with NMR spectroscopy of ubiquitin mutants in solutions of free ligands show a good agreement between the two with regard to the preferred binding region on the surface of the protein and several binding sites. MD simulations also identify additional binding sites that were not observed in the NMR experiments. Bound ligands were found to be sufficiently flexible and to access a number of favorable conformations, suggesting only a moderate loss of ligand entropy in the pseudo affinity binding of these multimodal ligands. Analysis of locations of chemical subunits of the ligand on the protein surface indicated that electrostatic interaction units were located on the periphery of the preferred binding region on the protein. The analysis of the electrostatic potential, the hydrophobicity maps, and the binding of both acetate and benzene probes were used to further study the localization of individual ligand moieties. These results suggest that water-mediated electrostatic interactions help the localization and orientation of the MM ligand to the binding region with additional stability provided by nonspecific hydrophobic interactions.

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