4.0 Article

Entropy of stapled peptide inhibitors in free state is the major contributor to the improvement of binding affinity with the GK domain

Journal

RSC CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages 1274-1284

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cb00087j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Hong Kong Research Grant Council [17309616, T13-605/18-W, AoE/M-09/12, AoE/P-705/16]
  2. Innovation and Technology Commission [ITCPD/17-9]
  3. Asia Cancer Foundation

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Stapled peptides are a promising type of protein-protein interaction inhibitors that enhance binding potency through entropy gain. By studying the enthalpic and entropic contributions of stapled peptides targeting the PSD-95 GK domain, researchers successfully designed a stapled peptide (staple 1) with significantly increased binding affinity, mainly attributed to the constrained-helix structure in solution. Further design of staple 2 and 3 demonstrated larger entropy gains, but the loose binding in their bound states offset the excess entropy gain, highlighting the importance of stability in free solution for rational stapled peptide design.
Stapled peptides are promising protein-protein interaction (PPI) inhibitors that can increase the binding potency. Different from small-molecule inhibitors in which the binding mainly depends on energetic interactions with their protein targets, the binding of stapled peptides has long been suggested to be benefited from entropy. However, it remains challenging to reveal the molecular features that lead to this entropy gain, which could originate from the stabilization of the stapled peptide in solution or from the increased flexibility of the complex upon binding. This hinders the rational design of stapled peptides as PPI inhibitors. Using the guanylate kinase (GK) domain of the postsynaptic density protein 95 (PSD-95) as the target, we quantified the enthalpic and entropic contributions by combining isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), X-ray crystallography, and free energy calculations based on all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We successfully designed a stapled peptide inhibitor (staple 1) of the PSD-95 GK domain that led to a 25-fold increase in the binding affinity (from tens of mu Ms to 1.36 mu M) with high cell permeability. We showed that entropy indeed greatly enhanced the binding affinity and the entropy gain was mainly due to the constrained-helix structure of the stapled peptide in solution (free state). Based on staple 1, we further designed two other stapled peptides (staple 2 and 3), which exerted even larger entropy gains compared to staple 1 because of their more flexible bound complexes (bound state). However, for staple 2 and 3, the overall binding affinities were not improved, as the loose binding in their bound states led to an enthalpic loss that largely compensated the excess entropy gain. Our work suggests that increasing the stability of the stapled peptide in free solution is an effective strategy for the rational design of stapled peptides as PPI inhibitors.

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