5 research outputs found
Targeting Unoccupied Surfaces on Protein–Protein Interfaces
The use of peptidomimetic scaffolds
to target protein–protein
interfaces is a promising strategy for inhibitor design. The strategy
relies on mimicry of protein motifs that exhibit a concentration of
native hot spot residues. To address this constraint, we present a
pocket-centric computational design strategy guided by AlphaSpace
to identify high-quality pockets near the peptidomimetic motif that
are both targetable and unoccupied. Alpha-clusters serve as a spatial
representation of pocket space and are used to guide the selection
of natural and non-natural amino acid mutations to design inhibitors
that optimize pocket occupation across the interface. We tested the
strategy against a challenging protein–protein interaction
target, KIX/MLL, by optimizing a single helical motif within MLL to
compete against the full-length wild-type MLL sequence. Molecular
dynamics simulation and experimental fluorescence polarization assays
are used to verify the efficacy of the optimized peptide sequence