Abstract
Protein-protein interactions represent difficult but increasingly important targets for the design of therapeutic compounds able to interfere with biological processes. Recently, fragment-based strategies have been proposed as attractive approaches for the elaboration of protein-protein surface inhibitors from fragment-like molecules. One major challenge in targeting protein-protein interactions is related to the structural adaptation of the protein surface upon molecular recognition. Methods capable of identifying subtle conformational changes of proteins upon fragment binding are therefore required at the early steps of the drug design process. In this report we present a fast NMR method able to probe subtle conformational changes upon fragment binding. The approach relies on the comparison of experimental fragment-induced Chemical Shift Perturbation (CSP) of amine protons to CSP simulated for a set of docked fragment poses, considering the ring-current effect from fragment binding. We illustrate the method by the retrospective analysis of the complex between the anti-apoptotic Bcl-xL protein and the fragment 4′-fluoro-[1,1′-biphenyl]-4-carboxylic acid that was previously shown to bind one of the Bcl-xL hot spots. The CSP-based approach shows that the protein undergoes a subtle conformational rearrangement upon interaction, for residues located in helices 2, 3 and the very beginning of 5. Our observations are corroborated by residual dipolar coupling measurements performed on the free and fragment-bound forms of the Bcl-xL protein. These NMR-based results are in total agreement with previous molecular dynamic calculations that evidenced a high flexibility of Bcl-xL around the binding site. Here we show that CSP of protein amine protons are useful and reliable structural probes. Therefore, we propose to use CSP simulation to assess protein conformational changes upon ligand binding in the fragment-based drug design approach.
Highlights
Protein-Protein Interactions (PPI) play a major role in a large diversity of processes in cells [1]
To investigate Bcl-xL conformational changes upon fragment binding, 2D NMR spectra were recorded for the protein in the absence and the presence of increasing concentrations of the compound 1 (Figure 1)
The binding of fragment 1 induces large chemical shift perturbations for residues located in helices a2 (Gly94, Phe97, Glu98, Leu99, Tyr101 and Arg102), a3 (Asp107, Thr109 and Ser110) and a5 (Asn136, Trp137, Glu138, Arg139, Ile140 and Ala142)
Summary
Protein-Protein Interactions (PPI) play a major role in a large diversity of processes in cells [1]. PPI are important therapeutic targets for the design of inhibitors capable of preventing the formation of protein-protein complexes and interfering with biological pathways. Proteinprotein interfaces happen to be rather flat and large and are less prone to interact with ligands than smaller and deeper pockets found in binding sites of proteins such as enzymes [2,3,4,5,6]. FBDD consists of screening fragment-like molecules against protein targets, using biophysical methods such as Surface Plasmon Resonance, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and X-ray crystallography [9,10]. PPI inhibitors resulting from fragment-based approaches have been reported for the Bcl-2 family [14,15,16,17,18], for interleukins [19], and for the ZipA/FtsZ interaction [20]. FBDD methods have been successfully applied to target the Ras/SOS complex [21,22] and the BRCA2/RAD51 complex [3]
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