Abstract

The dynamics and plasticity of the PD-1/PD-L1 axis are the bottlenecks for the discovery of small-molecule antagonists to perturb this interaction interface significantly. Understanding the process of this protein-protein interaction (PPI) is of fundamental biological interest in structure-based drug designing. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are the first-in-class with distinct binding modes to access this axis clinically; however, their mechanistic aspects remain elusive. Here, we have unveiled the interactive interfaces with PD-L1 and mAbs to investigate the native plasticity of PD-1 at global (structural and dynamical) and local (residue side-chain orientations) levels. We found that the structural stability and coordinated Cα movements are increased in the presence of PD-1's binding partners. The rigorous analysis of these PPIs using computational biophysical approaches revealed PD-1's intrinsic plasticity, its concerted loops' movement (BC, FG, and CC'), distal side-chain motions, and the thermodynamic landscape, which are perturbed remarkably from its unbound to bound states. Based on intra-/inter-residues' contact networks and energetics, the hot-spots have been identified that were found to be essential to arrest the dynamical motions of PD-1 significantly for the rational design of therapeutic agents by mimicking the mAbs mechanism.

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