Sucur, Zoran* Dotaz Zobrazit nápovědu
Biomolecular simulations are routinely used in biochemistry and molecular biology research; however, they often fail to match expectations of their impact on pharmaceutical and biotech industry. This is caused by the fact that a vast amount of computer time is required to simulate short episodes from the life of biomolecules. Several approaches have been developed to overcome this obstacle, including application of massively parallel and special purpose computers or non-conventional hardware. Methodological approaches are represented by coarse-grained models and enhanced sampling techniques. These techniques can show how the studied system behaves in long time-scales on the basis of relatively short simulations. This review presents an overview of new simulation approaches, the theory behind enhanced sampling methods and success stories of their applications with a direct impact on biotechnology or drug design.
Interactions between proteins and their small molecule ligands are of great importance for the process of drug design. Here we report an unbiased molecular dynamics simulation of systems containing hevein domain (HEV32) with N-acetylglucosamine mono-, di- or trisaccharide. Carbohydrate molecules were placed outside the binding site. Three of six simulations (6 × 2 μs) led to binding of a carbohydrate ligand into the binding mode in agreement with the experimentally determined structure. Unbinding was observed in one simulation (monosaccharide). There were no remarkable intermediates of binding for mono and disaccharide. Trisaccharide binding was initiated by formation of carbohydrate-aromatic CH/π interactions. Our results indicate that binding of ligands followed the model of conformational selection because the conformation of the protein ready for ligand binding was observed before the binding. This study extends the concept of docking by dynamics on carbohydrate-protein interactions.