相互作用体
碎片分子轨道
计算生物学
蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用
药物发现
化学
小分子
蛋白质功能
蛋白质结构
结构生物信息学
生物信息学
生物化学
生物
分子
分子轨道
基因
有机化学
作者
Stefania Monteleone,Dmitri G. Fedorov,Andrea Townsend‐Nicholson,Michelle Southey,Michael J. Bodkin,Alexander Heifetz
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.jcim.2c00457
摘要
Protein–protein interactions (PPIs) are essential for the function of many proteins. Aberrant PPIs have the potential to lead to disease, making PPIs promising targets for drug discovery. There are over 64,000 PPIs in the human interactome reference database; however, to date, very few PPI modulators have been approved for clinical use. Further development of PPI-specific therapeutics is highly dependent on the availability of structural data and the existence of reliable computational tools to explore the interface between two interacting proteins. The fragment molecular orbital (FMO) quantum mechanics method offers comprehensive and computationally inexpensive means of identifying the strength (in kcal/mol) and the chemical nature (electrostatic or hydrophobic) of the molecular interactions taking place at the protein–protein interface. We have integrated FMO and PPI exploration (FMO-PPI) to identify the residues that are critical for protein–protein binding (hotspots). To validate this approach, we have applied FMO-PPI to a dataset of protein–protein complexes representing several different protein subfamilies and obtained FMO-PPI results that are in agreement with published mutagenesis data. We observed that critical PPIs can be divided into three major categories: interactions between residues of two proteins (intermolecular), interactions between residues within the same protein (intramolecular), and interactions between residues of two proteins that are mediated by water molecules (water bridges). We extended our findings by demonstrating how this information obtained by FMO-PPI can be utilized to support the structure-based drug design of PPI modulators (SBDD-PPI).
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI