4.4 Article

Differential Large-Amplitude Breathing Motions in the Interface of FKBP12-Drug Complexes

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 54, Issue 47, Pages 6983-6995

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00820

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) [21121002, 26119005, 25440018]
  2. Platform Project for Supporting in Drug Discovery and Life Science Research from MEXT
  3. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED)
  4. Advanced Research Program, under the Asian Human Resources Fund Program - Tokyo Metropolitan Government
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26119005, 25440018] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The tight complexes FKBP12 forms with immunosuppressive drugs, such as FK506 and rapamycin, are frequently used as models for developing approaches to structure-based drug design. Although the interfaces between FKBP12 and these ligands are well-defined structurally and are almost identical in the X-ray crystallographic structures of various complexes, our nuclear magnetic resonance studies have revealed the existence of substantial large-amplitude motions in the FKBP12-ligand interfaces that depend on the nature of the ligand. We have monitored these motions by measuring the rates of Tyr and Phe aromatic ring flips, and hydroxyl proton exchange for residues clustered within the FKBP12-ligand interface. The results show that the rates of hydroxyl proton exchange and ring flipping for Tyr26 are much slower in the FK506 complex than in the rapamycin complex, whereas the rates of ring flipping for Phe48 and Phe99 are significantly faster in the FK506 complex than in the rapamycin complex. The apparent rate differences observed for the interfacial aromatic residues in the two complexes confirm that these dynamic processes occur without ligand dissociation. We tentatively attribute the differential interface dynamics for these complexes to a single hydrogen bond between the zeta-hydrogen of Phe46 and the C32 carbonyl oxygen of rapamycin, which is not present in the KF506 complex. This newly identified Phe46 zeta-hydrogen bond in the rapamycin complex imposes motional restriction on the surrounding hydrophobic cluster and subsequently regulates the dynamics within the protein-ligand interface. Such information concerning large-amplitude dynamics at drug-target interfaces has the potential to provide novel clues for drug design.

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