Abstract

The understanding of binding interactions between any protein and a small molecule plays a key role in the rationalization of affinity and selectivity and is essential for an efficient structure-based drug discovery (SBDD) process. Clearly, to begin SBDD, a structure is needed, and although there has been fantastic progress in solving G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) crystal structures, the process remains quite slow and is not currently feasible for every GPCR or GPCR–ligand complex. This situation significantly limits the ability of X-ray crystallography to impact the drug discovery process for GPCR targets in ‘real-time’ and hence there is still a need for other practical and cost-efficient alternatives. We present here an approach that integrates our previously described hierarchical GPCR modelling protocol (HGMP) and the fragment molecular orbital (FMO) quantum mechanics (QM) method to explore the interactions and selectivity of the human orexin-2 receptor (OX2R) and its recently discovered nonpeptidic agonists. HGMP generates a 3D model of GPCR structures and its complexes with small molecules by applying a set of computational methods. FMO allows ab initio approaches to be applied to systems that conventional QM methods would find challenging. The key advantage of FMO is that it can reveal information on the individual contribution and chemical nature of each residue and water molecule to the ligand binding that normally would be difficult to detect without QM. We illustrate how the combination of both techniques provides a practical and efficient approach that can be used to analyse the existing structure–function relationships (SAR) and to drive forward SBDD in a real-world example for which there is no crystal structure of the complex available.

Highlights

  • G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR)–ligand interactions are fundamental to almost all processes occurring in living organisms, and as such it is perhaps unsurprising that they are the targets of about 40 % of all prescribed drugs [1,2,3]

  • In our recent report [29] we described how fragment molecular orbital (FMO) has been applied for the analysis of 18 GPCR– ligand crystal structures representing different branches of c 2016 The Author(s)

  • We present a new approach that opens an alternative avenue for the structural exploration of GPCRs and structure-based GPCR drug discovery

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Summary

Introduction

G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR)–ligand interactions are fundamental to almost all processes occurring in living organisms, and as such it is perhaps unsurprising that they are the targets of about 40 % of all prescribed drugs [1,2,3]. The pair interaction energy (PIE) between any two fragments calculated by FMO is a sum of four energy terms: electrostatics, exchange-repulsion, charge transfer and dispersion, provided by pair interaction energy decomposition analysis (PIEDA) [25] – see Figure 1.

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