Abstract

Integrins belong to a family of cell adhesion receptors. To better understand an adhesion mechanism of integrins, fragmented molecular orbital (FMO) method with pair interaction energy decomposition analysis (PIEDA) was applied for integrin:ligand complexes. Interaction energies were evaluated between the amino acid residues including Mg2+ and Ca2+ ions at ligand-binding site of αIIbβ3 integrin and two peptide chains with the Ala-Gly-Asp (AGD)- and the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-binding motifs, a cyclic peptide (eptifibatide), peptidomimetic ligands (tirofiban and L-739758) and poly(l-lactic acid) chain (PLA). The results indicate that Mg2+ and Ca2+ ions together with Asp224A, Asn215B, Asp159A and Lys125B of αIIbβ3 are the most important residues for a binding of the peptidic ligands while for the peptidomimetic ligands and PLA, interactions with Ca2+ ions are less significant than those with amino acid residues of αIIbβ3. For all complexes, a dominant part of interaction energy comes from electrostatic interactions. New developed antagonists of αIIbβ3 should mimic not only the interactions of the RGD motif but also the interactions of the backbone of a longer peptidic sequence (RGDV or AGDV) with the focus on the interactions of the antagonists with the ADMIDAS Ca2+ ion. An interaction pattern predicted for PLA was compared with the native peptidic ligands.

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