4.7 Article

The Roles of Water in the Protein Matrix: A Largely Untapped Resource for Drug Discovery

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 60, Issue 16, Pages 6781-6827

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.7b00057

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The value of thoroughly understanding the thermodynamics specific to a drug discovery/design study is well known. Over the past decade, the crucial roles of water molecules in protein structure, function, and dynamics have also become increasingly appreciated. This Perspective explores water in the biological environment by adopting its point of view in such phenomena. The prevailing thermodynamic models of the past, where water was seen largely in terms of an entropic gain after its displacement by a ligand, are now known to be much too simplistic. We adopt a set of terminology that describes water molecules as being hot and cold, which we have defined as being easy and difficult to displace, respectively. The basis of these designations, which involve both enthalpic and entropic water contributions, are explored in several classes of biomolecules and structural motifs. The hallmarks for characterizing water molecules are examined, and computational tools for evaluating water-centric thermodynamics are reviewed. This Perspectives summary features guidelines for exploiting water molecules in drug discovery.

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