4.5 Article

Effects of Enzyme-Ligand Interactions on the Photoisomerization of a Light-Regulated Chemotherapeutic Drug

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 126, Issue 12, Pages 2382-2393

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c10819

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Funding

  1. Texas Tech University

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The protein environment plays a crucial role in influencing the photodynamics of photoswitches, which has important implications for the rational design of light-regulated therapeutics.
Molecular photoswitches permit using light to control protein activity with high spatiotemporal resolutions, thereby alleviating the side effects of conventional chemotherapy. However, due to the challenges in probing ultrafast photoisomerization reactions in biological environments, it remains elusive how the protein influences the photochemistry of the photoswitches, which hampers the rational design of light-regulated therapeutics. To overcome this challenge, we employed first-principles nonadiabatic dynamics simulations to characterize the photodynamics of the phototrexate (PTX), a recently developed photoswitchable anticancer chemo-therapeutic that reversibly inhibits its target enzyme dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). Our simulations show that the protein environ-ment impedes the trans to cis photoisomerization of the PTX. The confinement in the ligand-binding cavity slows down the isomerization kinetics and quantum yield of the photoswitch by reshaping its conical intersection, increasing its excited-state free-energy barrier and quenching its local density fluctuations. Also, the protein environment results in a suboptimal binding mode of the photoproduct that needs to undergo large structural rearrangement to effectively inhibit the enzyme. Therefore, we predict that the PTX's trans-* cis photoisomerization in solution precedes its binding with the protein, despite the favorable binding energy of the trans isomer. Our findings highlight the importance of the protein environment on the photochemical reactions of the molecular photoswitches. As such, our work represents an important step toward the rational design of light-regulated drugs in photopharmacology.

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