1 research outputs found
Detailed Computational Study of the Active Site of the Hepatitis C Viral RNA Polymerase to Aid Novel Drug Design
The
hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA polymerase, NS5B, is a leading target
for novel and selective HCV drug design. The enzyme has been the subject
of intensive drug discovery aimed at developing direct acting antiviral
(DAA) agents that inhibit its activity and hence prevent the virus
from replicating its genome. In this study, we focus on one class
of NS5B inhibitors, namely nucleosÂ(t)Âide mimetics. Forty-one distinct
nucleotide structures have been modeled within the active site of
NS5B for the six major HCV genotypes. Our comprehensive modeling protocol
employed 287 different molecular dynamics simulations combined with
the molecular mechanics/Poisson–Boltzmann surface area (MM-PBSA)
methodology to rank and analyze these structures for all genotypes.
The binding interactions of the individual compounds have been investigated
and reduced to the atomic level. The present study significantly refines
our understanding of the mode of action of NS5B-nucleotide-inhibitors,
identifies the key structural elements necessary for their activity,
and implements the tools for ranking the potential of additional much
needed novel inhibitors of NS5B