Inhibitor
Design Strategy Based on an Enzyme Structural
Flexibility: A Case of Bacterial MurD Ligase
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Abstract
Increasing
bacterial resistance to available antibiotics stimulated
the discovery of novel efficacious antibacterial agents. The biosynthesis
of the bacterial peptidoglycan, where the MurD enzyme is involved
in the intracellular phase of the UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide formation,
represents a collection of highly selective targets for novel antibacterial
drug design. In our previous computational studies, the C-terminal
domain motion of the MurD ligase was investigated using Targeted Molecular
Dynamic (TMD) simulation and the Off-Path Simulation (OPS) technique.
In this study, we present a drug design strategy using multiple protein
structures for the identification of novel MurD ligase inhibitors.
Our main focus was the ATP-binding site of the MurD enzyme. In the
first stage, three MurD protein conformations were selected based
on the obtained OPS/TMD data as the initial criterion. Subsequently,
a two-stage virtual screening approach was utilized combining derived
structure-based pharmacophores with molecular docking calculations.
Selected compounds were then assayed in the established enzyme binding
assays, and compound <b>3</b> from the aminothiazole class was
discovered to act as a dual MurC/MurD inhibitor in the micomolar range.
A steady-state kinetic study was performed on the MurD enzyme to provide
further information about the mechanistic aspects of its inhibition.
In the final stage, all used conformations of the MurD enzyme with
compound <b>3</b> were simulated in classical molecular dynamics
(MD) simulations providing atomistic insights of the experimental
results. Overall, the study depicts several challenges that need to
be addressed when trying to hit a flexible moving target such as the
presently studied bacterial MurD enzyme and show the possibilities
of how computational tools can be proficiently used at all stages
of the drug discovery process