4.7 Article

Structural determinants of TRPV4 inhibition and identification of new antagonists with antiviral activity

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 179, Issue 14, Pages 3576-3591

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bph.15267

Keywords

antiviral; drug discovery; HC067047; in silico; inhibition; molecular dynamics; RN1734; structure; TRPV4

Funding

  1. Chilean Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Tecnologico (FONDECYT) [1170733]
  2. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [BFU2016-80039-R, RTI2018-099718]
  3. Millennium Scientific Initiative of the Ministerio de Economia, Fomento y Turismo [P029-022-F]
  4. US Army of USA [W911NF14-1-0520]
  5. Fondecyt Regular
  6. Unidad de Excelencia Maria de Maeztu [CEX2018-000792-M]

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This study investigated the structure and inhibition mechanism of TRPV4 channels using computational methods and experimental approaches. The results revealed that the known TRPV4 inhibitor HC067047 binds to a specific site, and additional potential channel modulators were identified through virtual screening. One of the compounds, NSC151066, demonstrated antiviral effects against Zika virus and exhibited similar inhibitory potency to HC067047.
Background and Purpose: The transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) cation channel participates in multiple physiological processes and is also at the core of different diseases, making this channel an interesting pharmacological target with therapeutic potential. However, little is known about the structural elements governing its inhibition. Experimental Approach: We have now combined in silico drug discovery and molecular dynamics simulation based onXenopus tropicalisxTRPV4 structure with functional studies measuring cell Ca2+ influx mediated by human TRPV4 channel to characterize the binding site of known TRPV4 inhibitors and to identify novel small molecule channel modulators. Key Results: We have found that the inhibitor HC067047 binds to a pocket conformed by residues from S2-S3 linker (xTRPV4-D542), S4 (xTRPV4-M583 and Y587 and S5 (xTRPV4-D609 and F613). This pocket was also used for structure-based virtual screening in the search of novel channel modulators. Forty potential hits were selected based on the lower docking scores (from similar to 250,000 compounds) and their effect upon TRPV4 functionally tested. Three were further analysed for stability using molecular dynamics simulation and functionally tested on TRPV4 channels carrying mutations in the binding pocket. Compound NSC151066, shown to require residue xTRPV4-M583 for its inhibitory effect, presented an IC50 of 145 nM and demonstrated to be an effective antiviral against Zika virus with a potency similar to HC067047. Conclusion and Implications: Together, we propose structural insights into the inhibition of TRPV4 and how this information can be used for the design of novel channel modulators.

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