Abstract

Molecular photoswitches offer precise, reversible photocontrol over biomolecular functions and are promising light-regulated drug candidates with minimal side effects. Quantifying thermal isomerization rates of photoswitches in their target biomolecules is essential for fine-tuning their light-controlled drug activity. However, the effects of protein binding on isomerization kinetics remain poorly understood, and simulations are crucial for filling this gap. Challenges in the simulation include describing multireference electronic structures near transition states, disentangling competing reaction pathways, and sampling protein-ligand interactions. To overcome these challenges, we used multiscale simulations to characterize the thermal isomerization of photostatins (PSTs), which are light-regulated microtubule inhibitors for potential cancer phototherapy. We employed a new ab initio multireference electronic structure method in a quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics setting and combined it with enhanced sampling techniques to characterize the cis to trans free-energy profiles of three PSTs in a vacuum, aqueous solution, and tubulin dimer. The significant advantage of our novel approach is the efficient treatment of the multireference character in PSTs' electronic wavefunction throughout the conformational sampling of protein-ligand interactions along their isomerization pathways. We also benchmarked our calculations using high-level ab initio multireference electronic structure methods and explored the competing isomerization pathways. Notably, calculations in a vacuum and implicit solvent models cannot predict the order of the PSTs' thermal half-lives in the aqueous solution observed in the experiment. Only by explicitly treating the solvent molecules can the correct order of isomerization kinetics be reproduced. Protein binding perturbs free-energy barriers due to hydrogen bonding between PSTs and nearby polar residues. Our work generates comprehensive, high-quality benchmark data and offers guidance for selecting computational methods to study the thermal isomerization of photoswitches. Ab initio multireference free-energy calculations in explicit molecular environments are crucial for predicting the effects of substituents on the thermal half-lives of photoswitches in biological systems.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call