4.4 Article

Structure based classification for bile salt export pump (BSEP) inhibitors using comparative structural modeling of human BSEP

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPUTER-AIDED MOLECULAR DESIGN
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages 507-521

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10822-017-0021-x

Keywords

BSEP; Structure-based classification; Drug-induced cholestasis; Inhibiton; Transporters; Classification model

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
  2. Austrian Science Fund [F03502 (SFB35), W1232]
  3. Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking [115002]
  4. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [F 3502] Funding Source: researchfish

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The bile salt export pump (BSEP) actively transports conjugated monovalent bile acids from the hepatocytes into the bile. This facilitates the formation of micelles and promotes digestion and absorption of dietary fat. Inhibition of BSEP leads to decreased bile flow and accumulation of cytotoxic bile salts in the liver. A number of compounds have been identified to interact with BSEP, which results in drug-induced cholestasis or liver injury. Therefore, in silico approaches for flagging compounds as potential BSEP inhibitors would be of high value in the early stage of the drug discovery pipeline. Up to now, due to the lack of a high-resolution X-ray structure of BSEP, in silico based identification of BSEP inhibitors focused on ligand-based approaches. In this study, we provide a homology model for BSEP, developed using the corrected mouse P-glycoprotein structure (PDB ID: 4M1M). Subsequently, the model was used for docking-based classification of a set of 1212 compounds (405 BSEP inhibitors, 807 non-inhibitors). Using the scoring function ChemScore, a prediction accuracy of 81% on the training set and 73% on two external test sets could be obtained. In addition, the applicability domain of the models was assessed based on Euclidean distance. Further, analysis of the protein-ligand interaction fingerprints revealed certain functional group-amino acid residue interactions that could play a key role for ligand binding. Though ligand-based models, due to their high speed and accuracy, remain the method of choice for classification of BSEP inhibitors, structure-assisted docking models demonstrate reasonably good prediction accuracies while additionally providing information about putative protein-ligand interactions.

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