4.7 Article

pH and non-covalent ligand binding modulate Zika virus NS2B/NS3 protease binding site residues: Discoveries from MD and constant pH MD simulations

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE & DYNAMICS
Volume 40, Issue 20, Pages 10359-10372

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/07391102.2021.1943528

Keywords

Zika virus; NS2B/NS3 protease; protonation; noncovalent binding; molecular dynamics; Constant pH molecular dynamics

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior -Brasil (CAPES) [001]
  2. Brazilian agency FAPEMIG (Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais, Rede Mineira de Imunobiologicos grant) [REDE-00140-16]
  3. Brazilian agency CAPES
  4. CNPq

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This study investigates the impact of non-covalent binding on the residues of the active site of the Zika virus NS2B/NS3 protease using theoretical computational methods. It is found that the protonation of catalytic residues can occur under different conditions, and non-covalent binding can affect the configuration of the active site.
Zika virus (ZIKV) is a global health concern and has been linked to severe neurological pathologies. Although no medication is available yet, many efforts to develop antivirals and host cell binding inhibitors led to attractive drug-like scaffolds, mainly targeting the nonstructural NS2B/NS3 protease (NS2B/ NS3pro). NS2B/NS3pro active site has several titratable residues susceptible to pH changes and ligand binding; hence, understanding these residues' protonation is essential to drug design efforts targeting the active site. Here we use in silico methods to probe non-covalent binding and its effect on pKa shifts of the active site residues on a ligand-free protease and with a non-peptidic competitive inhibitor (Ki 1/4 13.5 mM). By applying constant pH molecular dynamics, we found that the catalytic residues of the unbound NS2B/NS3pro achieved the protonation needed for the serine protease mechanism over the pH value of 8.5. Nevertheless, the protease in the holo state achieved this same scenario at lower pH values. Also, non-covalent binding affected the catalytic triad (H51, D75, and S135) by stabilizing their distances and interaction network. Thus, NS2B/NS3pro residues configuration for activity might be both pH-dependent and influenced by ligand binding. However, compound presence within the binding site destabilized the NS2B, interfering with the closed and active conformation necessary for substrate binding and catalysis. Our outcomes provide valuable insights into non-covalent inhibitor behavior and its effect on protease active site residues, impacting optimization and design of novel compounds.

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