Abstract

Continuum electrostatic methods are a powerful tool for the analysis and design of biomolecular complexes, with methodologies that allow for the detailed analysis of the electrostatic contributions to binding affinities and procedures for computing the properties of electrostatically optimal ligands. We have applied these methods to the design of improved inhibitors of HIV-1 cell entry. HIV infection of a cell requires viral-cell membrane fusion, an event partially driven by a large-scale conformational change in the viral membrane glycoprotein gp41. This transformation involves the docking of a helix from the C-terminal region of three gp41 chains against a pre-formed trimeric-coiled coil; several protein constructs that inhibit membrane fusion act by binding to an isolated C-terminal helix and blocking the formation of the fusogenic structure. A detailed analysis of the electrostatic contributions to the binding of one such inhibitor (5-Helix) to a C-terminal helix was performed using the X-ray crystal structure of the core of the HIV-1 gp41 ectodomain as a structural model, and several residues on 5-Helix that make substantial contributions to binding, both favorable and unfavorable, were identified. An electrostatic affinity optimization methodology was applied to the side chains of 5-Helix, with the results showing that significant improvements in binding affinity are possible if the electrostatic contributions to the binding free energy are optimized. Several mutations accessible by experimental methods are suggested, with calculated improvements in binding affinity of as much as 500-fold and greater.

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