4.8 Article

Discovery of cryptic allosteric sites using reversed allosteric communication by a combined computational and experimental strategy

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 464-476

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0sc05131d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22077082, 21778037, 81925034, 91753117, 81721004]
  2. Innovation Program of Shanghai Municipal Education Commission (China) [2019-01-07-00-01E00036]
  3. Shanghai Science and Technology Innovation (China) [19431901600]
  4. Shanghai Health and Family Planning System Excellent Subject Leader and Excellent Young Medical Talents Training Program (China) [2018BR12]

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Allostery is a direct and efficient method for fine-tuning protein functions, gaining recognition in drug discovery. Identifying allosteric sites is a challenge for drug design, with recent studies revealing bidirectional allosteric coupling and reversed communication between orthosteric and allosteric sites. A new framework combining computational and experimental strategies has been proposed for predicting allosteric sites, demonstrating desirable performance in identifying potential cryptic sites for allosteric drug design.
Allostery, which is one of the most direct and efficient methods to fine-tune protein functions, has gained increasing recognition in drug discovery. However, there are several challenges associated with the identification of allosteric sites, which is the fundamental cornerstone of drug design. Previous studies on allosteric site predictions have focused on communication signals propagating from the allosteric sites to the orthosteric sites. However, recent biochemical studies have revealed that allosteric coupling is bidirectional and that orthosteric perturbations can modulate allosteric sites through reversed allosteric communication. Here, we proposed a new framework for the prediction of allosteric sites based on reversed allosteric communication using a combination of computational and experimental strategies (molecular dynamics simulations, Markov state models, and site-directed mutagenesis). The desirable performance of our approach was demonstrated by predicting the known allosteric site of the small molecule MDL-801 in nicotinamide dinucleotide (NAD(+))-dependent protein lysine deacetylase sirtuin 6 (Sirt6). A potential novel cryptic allosteric site located around the L116, R119, and S120 residues within the dynamic ensemble of Sirt6 was identified. The allosteric effect of the predicted site was further quantified and validated using both computational and experimental approaches. This study proposed a state-of-the-art computational pipeline for detecting allosteric sites based on reversed allosteric communication. This method enabled the identification of a previously uncharacterized potential cryptic allosteric site on Sirt6, which provides a starting point for allosteric drug design that can aid the identification of candidate pockets in other therapeutic targets.

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