4.7 Article

Molecular Dynamics Study on the Binding of an Anticancer DNA G-Quadruplex Stabilizer, CX-5461, to Human Telomeric, c-KIT1, and c-Myc G-Quadruplexes and a DNA Duplex

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING
Volume 60, Issue 10, Pages 5203-5224

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00632

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [RUI-1904797/MRI-1429467, XSEDE MCB170088]

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DNA G-quadruplex (G4) stabilizer, CX-5461, is in phase I/II clinical trials for advanced cancers with BRCA1/2 deficiencies. A FRET-melting temperature increase assay measured the stabilizing effects of CX-5461 to a DNA duplex (similar to 10 K), and three G4 forming sequences negatively implicated in the cancers upon its binding: human telomeric (similar to 30 K), c-KIT1 (similar to 27 K), and c-Myc (similar to 25 K). Without experimentally solved structures of these CX-5461-G4 complexes, CX-5461's interactions remain elusive. In this study, we performed a total of 73.5 mu s free ligand molecular dynamics binding simulations of CX-5461 to the DNA duplex and three G4s. Three binding modes (top, bottom, and side) were identified for each system and their thermodynamic, kinetic, and structural nature were deciphered. The molecular mechanics/Poisson Boltzmann surface area binding energies of CX-5461 were calculated for the human telomeric (-28.6 kcal/mol), c-KIT1 (-23.9 kcal/mol), c-Myc (-22.0 kcal/mol) G4s, and DNA duplex (-15.0 kcal/mol) systems. These energetic differences coupled with structural differences at the 3' site explained the different melting temperatures between the G4s, while CX-5461's lack of intercalation to the duplex explained the difference between the G4s and duplex. Based on the interaction insight, CX-5461 derivatives were designed and docked, showing higher selectivity to the G4s over the duplex.

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