Integration of Hydrogen-Deuterium Exchange Mass Spectrometry with Molecular Dynamics Simulations and Ensemble Reweighting Enables High Resolution Protein-Ligand Modeling
Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké Médium print-electronic
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
PubMed
39254669
DOI
10.1021/jasms.4c00202
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- Klíčová slova
- Computational Docking, ERK2, FosAKP, HDX-MS, HDXer, Hydrogen−Deuterium Exchange, Maximum Entropy Reweighting, Molecular Dynamics Simulations, Protein−Ligand Modeling, Protein−Small Molecule Interactions, Structure Based Drug Design,
- MeSH
- konformace proteinů MeSH
- ligandy MeSH
- proteiny chemie metabolismus MeSH
- simulace molekulární dynamiky * MeSH
- simulace molekulového dockingu MeSH
- vazba proteinů MeSH
- vazebná místa MeSH
- vodík/deuteriová výměna a hmotnostní spektrometrie * metody MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- Názvy látek
- ligandy MeSH
- proteiny MeSH
Hydrogen-Deuterium exchange mass spectrometry's (HDX-MS) utility in identifying and characterizing protein-small molecule interaction sites has been established. The regions that are seen to be protected from exchange upon ligand binding indicate regions that may be interacting with the ligand, giving a qualitative understanding of the ligand binding pocket. However, quantitatively deriving an accurate high-resolution structure of the protein-ligand complex from the HDX-MS data remains a challenge, often limiting its use in applications such as small molecule drug design. Recent efforts have focused on the development of methods to quantitatively model Hydrogen-Deuterium exchange (HDX) data from computationally modeled structures to garner atomic level insights from peptide-level resolution HDX-MS. One such method, HDX ensemble reweighting (HDXer), employs maximum entropy reweighting of simulated HDX data to experimental HDX-MS to model structural ensembles. In this study, we implement and validate a workflow which quantitatively leverages HDX-MS data to accurately model protein-small molecule ligand interactions. To that end, we employ a strategy combining computational protein-ligand docking, molecular dynamics simulations, HDXer, and dimensional reduction and clustering approaches to extract high-resolution drug binding poses that most accurately conform with HDX-MS data. We apply this workflow to model the interaction of ERK2 and FosA with small molecule compounds and inhibitors they are known to bind. In five out of six of the protein-ligand pairs tested, the HDX derived protein-ligand complexes result in a ligand root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) within 2.5 Å of the known crystal structure ligand.
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