Capturing a dynamically interacting inhibitor by paramagnetic NMR spectroscopy
Language English Country England, Great Britain Media print
Document type Journal Article
PubMed
30794275
DOI
10.1039/c9cp00416e
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Boranes chemistry MeSH
- HIV Protease chemistry MeSH
- Protein Conformation MeSH
- Metals chemistry MeSH
- Quantum Theory MeSH
- Ligands MeSH
- Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods MeSH
- Molecular Dynamics Simulation * MeSH
- Protein Binding MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Boranes MeSH
- HIV Protease MeSH
- Metals MeSH
- Ligands MeSH
- p16 protease, Human immunodeficiency virus 1 MeSH Browser
Transient and fuzzy intermolecular interactions are fundamental to many biological processes. Despite their importance, they are notoriously challenging to characterize. Effects induced by paramagnetic ligands in the NMR spectra of interacting biomolecules provide an opportunity to amplify subtle manifestations of weak intermolecular interactions observed for diamagnetic ligands. Here, we present an approach to characterizing dynamic interactions between a partially flexible dimeric protein, HIV-1 protease, and a metallacarborane-based ligand, a system for which data obtained by standard NMR approaches do not enable detailed structural interpretation. We show that for the case where the experimental data are significantly averaged to values close to zero the standard fitting of pseudocontact shifts cannot provide reliable structural information. We based our approach on generating a large ensemble of full atomic models, for which the experimental data can be predicted, ensemble averaged and finally compared to the experiment. We demonstrate that a combination of paramagnetic NMR experiments, quantum chemical calculations, and molecular dynamics simulations offers a route towards structural characterization of dynamic protein-ligand complexes.
References provided by Crossref.org
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