Abstract

The metabolism of living systems involves many enzymes that play key roles as catalysts and are essential to biological function. Searching ligands with the ability to modulate enzyme activities is central to diagnosis and therapeutics. Peptides represent a promising class of potential enzyme modulators due to the large chemical diversity, and well-established methods for library synthesis. Peptides and their derivatives are found to play critical roles in modulating enzymes and mediating cellular uptakes, which are increasingly valuable in therapeutics. We present a methodology that uses molecular dynamics (MD) and point-variant screening to identify short peptide motifs that are critical for inhibiting β-galactosidase (β-Gal). MD was used to simulate the conformations of peptides and to suggest short motifs that were most populated in simulated conformations. The function of the simulated motifs was further validated by the experimental point-variant screening as critical segments for inhibiting the enzyme. Based on the validated motifs, we eventually identified a 7-mer short peptide for inhibiting an enzyme with low μM IC50. The advantage of our methodology is the relatively simplified simulation that is informative enough to identify the critical sequence of a peptide inhibitor, with a precision comparable to truncation and alanine scanning experiments. Our combined experimental and computational approach does not rely on a detailed understanding of mechanistic and structural details. The MD simulation suggests the populated motifs that are consistent with the results of the experimental alanine and truncation scanning. This approach appears to be applicable to both natural and artificial peptides. With more discovered short motifs in the future, they could be exploited for modulating biocatalysis, and developing new medicine.

Highlights

  • IntroductionCellular functions highly rely on enzymes to make molecules and derive energy that are vital to metabolism and reproduction of living systems.[1, 2] Regulation of enzyme activity is central to therapeutics and drug discovery.[3, 4] High-throughput screening or selection of a vast

  • molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of the lead peptide suggested that a 7-mer linear short motif was critical for peptide activity

  • This motif was presented in the most populated conformations. Consistent with this modelling result, the same motif was identified by the alanine and truncation scanning of the lead peptide, and was validated by inhibiting enzyme at low μM IC50 value

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Summary

Introduction

Cellular functions highly rely on enzymes to make molecules and derive energy that are vital to metabolism and reproduction of living systems.[1, 2] Regulation of enzyme activity is central to therapeutics and drug discovery.[3, 4] High-throughput screening or selection of a vast. Short peptide motifs for enzyme inhibition for Computational and Integrative Biology (CCIB) through the National Science Foundation

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