4.4 Article

Leveraging structural and 2D-QSAR to investigate the role of functional group substitutions, conserved surface residues and desolvation in triggering the small molecule-induced dimerization of hPD-L1

Journal

BMC CHEMISTRY
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13065-022-00842-w

Keywords

Immune-checkpoints; Programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1); Small molecule drugs; Computational solvent mapping; Free-Wilson; R-group decomposition

Funding

  1. NSERC
  2. CIHR

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Small molecules targeting hPD-L1 protein have emerged as a promising new generation of immune checkpoints' inhibitors. This study provides an in-depth computational structural analysis of the interactions between five small molecules and hPD-L1, shedding light on the dynamics and molecular mechanisms driving their complex formation. The results highlight the importance of a terminal phenyl ring in hPD-L1 inhibitors.
Small molecules are rising as a new generation of immune checkpoints' inhibitors, with compounds targeting the human Programmed death-ligand 1 (hPD-L1) protein are pioneering this area of research. Promising examples include the recently disclosed compounds from Bristol-Myers-Squibb (BMS). These molecules bind specifically to hPD-L1 through a unique mode of action. They induce dimerization between two hPD-L1 monomers through the hPD-1 binding interface in each monomer, thereby inhibiting the PD-1/PD-L1 axis. While the recently reported crystal structures of such small molecules bound to hPD-L1 reveal valuable insights regarding their molecular interactions, there is still limited information about the dynamics driving this unusual complex formation. The current study provides an in-depth computational structural analysis to study the interactions of five small molecule compounds in complex with hPD-L1. By employing a combination of molecular dynamic simulations, binding energy calculations and computational solvent mapping techniques, our analyses quantified the dynamic roles of different hydrophilic and lipophilic residues at the surface of hPD-L1 in mediating these interactions. Furthermore, ligand-based analyses, including Free-Wilson 2D-QSAR was conducted to quantify the impact of R-group substitutions at different sites of the phenoxy-methyl biphenyl core. Our results emphasize the importance of a terminal phenyl ring that must be present in any hPD-L1 small molecule inhibitor. This phenyl moiety overlaps with a very unfavorable hydration site, which can explain the ability of such small molecules to trigger hPD-L1 dimerization.

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