Abstract
The role of water in protein-ligand binding has been an intensely studied topic in recent years; however, how ligand protonation state change perturbs water has not been considered. Here we show that water dynamics and interactions can be controlled by the protonation state of ligand using continuous constant pH molecular dynamics simulations of two closely related model systems, β-secretase 1 and 2 (BACE1 and BACE2), in complex with a small-molecule inhibitor. Simulations revealed that, upon binding, the inhibitor pyrimidine ring remains deprotonated in BACE1 but becomes protonated in BACE2. Pyrimidine protonation results in water displacement, rigidification of the binding pocket, and shift in the ligand binding mode from water-mediated to direct hydrogen bonding. These findings not only support but also rationalize the most recent structure-selectivity data in BACE1 drug design. Binding-induced protonation state changes are likely common; our work offers a glimpse at how modeling protein-ligand binding while allowing ligand titration can further advance the understanding of water and structure-based drug design.
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