4.7 Article

Binding Networks Identify Targetable Protein Pockets for Mechanism-Based Drug Design

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23137313

Keywords

ligand; mechanism; pathway; dynamics; channel

Funding

  1. Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office [K123836]
  2. National Research, Development and Innovation Fund of Hungary - EGA 16 funding scheme [TKP2021-EGA-16]
  3. National Research, Development and Innovation Fund of Hungary - EGA-13 funding scheme [TKP2021-EGA-13]
  4. Lorand Eotvos research network [TKP2021-EGA-13]
  5. Janos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  6. New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology [UNKP-21-5, UNKP-21-3-II]
  7. European Union
  8. European Social Fund [EFOP-3.6.1-16-2016-00004]
  9. [PTE AOK-KA 2021/KA-2021-39]

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The human genome only contains a limited number of druggable proteins, but there is still potential for discovering new drug-binding mechanisms and modes. A new method called NetBinder is introduced in this study for the systematic identification and classification of prerequisite binding sites at atomic resolution. NetBinder is validated using the binding mechanism of blebbistatin to myosin 2, and it shows excellent agreement with experimentally determined binding sites and structural changes. NetBinder provides a new paradigm for drug design by elucidating binding mechanisms at an atomic resolution using a networking framework.
The human genome codes only a few thousand druggable proteins, mainly receptors and enzymes. While this pool of available drug targets is limited, there is an untapped potential for discovering new drug-binding mechanisms and modes. For example, enzymes with long binding cavities offer numerous prerequisite binding sites that may be visited by an inhibitor during migration from a bulk solution to the destination site. Drug design can use these prerequisite sites as new structural targets. However, identifying these ephemeral sites is challenging. Here, we introduce a new method called NetBinder for the systematic identification and classification of prerequisite binding sites at atomic resolution. NetBinder is based on atomistic simulations of the full inhibitor binding process and provides a networking framework on which to select the most important binding modes and uncover the entire binding mechanism, including previously undiscovered events. NetBinder was validated by a study of the binding mechanism of blebbistatin (a potent inhibitor) to myosin 2 (a promising target for cancer chemotherapy). Myosin 2 is a good test enzyme because, like other potential targets, it has a long internal binding cavity that provides blebbistatin with numerous potential prerequisite binding sites. The mechanism proposed by NetBinder of myosin 2 structural changes during blebbistatin binding shows excellent agreement with experimentally determined binding sites and structural changes. While NetBinder was tested on myosin 2, it may easily be adopted to other proteins with long internal cavities, such as G-protein-coupled receptors or ion channels, the most popular current drug targets. NetBinder provides a new paradigm for drug design by a network-based elucidation of binding mechanisms at an atomic resolution.

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