Abstract

The SAR study on a phage library-derived non-phosphorylated cyclic peptide ligand of Grb2-SH2 domain indicates that the configuration of the cyclization linkage is crucial for assuming the active binding conformation. When the thioether linkage was oxidized to the two chiral sulfoxides, the R-configured sulfoxide-cyclized peptide displayed 10–30 times more potency than the corresponding S-configured one in binding affinity to the Grb2-SH2 domain. In this paper, the solution structures of such a pair of sulfoxide-bridged cyclic peptide diastereoisomers, i.e., cyclo[CH 2CO-Gla 1-L-Y-E-N-V-G-NPG-Y-( R/ S)C(O) 10]-amide, were determined by NMR and molecular dynamics simulation. Results indicate that the consensus sequence of Y 3-E 4-N 5-V 6 in both diastereoisomers adopt a β-turn conformation; however, the R-configured peptide forms an extended structure with a circular backbone conformation, while the S-configured isomer forms a compact structure with key residues buried inside the molecule. The average root-mean-square deviations were found to be 0.756 and 0.804 Å, respectively. It is apparent that the chiral S → O group played a key role in the solution structures of the sulfoxide-bridged cyclic peptides. The R-sulfoxide group forms an intramolecular hydrogen bond with the C-terminal amide, conferring a more rigid conformation with all residues protruding outside except for Leu2, in which the Gla1 and Tyr3 share an overlapping function as previous SAR studies proposed. Additionally, the extended structure endows a more hydrophilic binding surface of the R-configured peptide to facilitate its capture by its targeted protein. In comparison, the S-configured sulfoxide was embedded inside the ligand peptide leading to a compact structure, in which the essential residues of Gla1, Tyr3, and Asn5 form multiple intramolecular hydrogen bonds resulting in an unfavorable conformational change and a substantial loss of the interaction with the protein. The solution structures disclosed by our NMR and molecular dynamics simulation studies provide a molecular basis for understanding how the chirality of the cyclization linkage remarkably discriminates in terms of the binding affinity, thus advancing the rational design of potent non-phosphorylated inhibitors of Grb2-SH2 domain as antitumor agents.

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