2 research outputs found
Accounting for Target Flexibility and Water Molecules by Docking to Ensembles of Target Structures: The HCV NS5B Palm Site I Inhibitors Case Study
The
introduction of new anti-HCV drugs in therapy is an imperative
need and is necessary with a view to develop an interferon-free therapy.
Thus, the discovery and development of novel small molecule inhibitors
of the viral NS5B polymerase represent an exciting area of research
for many pharmaceutical companies and academic groups. This study
represents a contribution to this field and relies on the identification
of the best NS5B model(s) to be used in structure-based computational
approaches aimed at identifying novel non-nucleoside inhibitors of
one of the protein allosteric sites, namely, palm site I. First, the
NS5B inhibitors at palm site I were classified as water-mediated or
nonwater-mediated ligands depending on their ability to interact with
or displace a specific water molecule. Then, we took advantage of
the available X-ray structures of the NS5B/ligand complexes to build
different models of protein/water combinations, which were used to
investigate the influence on docking studies of solvent sites as well
as of the influence of the protein conformations. As the overall trend,
we observed improved performance in the docking results of the water-mediated
inhibitors by inclusion of explicit water molecules, with an opposite
behavior generally happening for the nonwater-mediated inhibitors.
The best performing target structures for the two ligand sets were
then used for virtual screening simulations of a library containing
the known NS5B inhibitors along with related decoys to assess the
best performing targets ensembles on the basis of their ability to
discriminate active and inactive compounds as well as to generate
the correct binding modes. The parallel use of different protein structures/water
sets outperformed the use of a single target structure, with the two-protein
3H98/2W-2FVC/7W and 3HKY/NoW-3SKE/NoW models resulting in the best
performing ensembles for water-mediated inhibitors and nonwater-mediated
inhibitors, respectively. The information gathered from this work
confirms the primary role of water molecules and protein flexibility
in docking-based studies and can be exploited to aid NS5B-directed
HCV drug discovery efforts