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Protein tyrosine phosphatases: Ligand interaction analysis and optimisation of virtual screening
Affiliation:1. Université de Tunis EL Manar, Faculté de Sciences, Département de Chimie, Laboratoire des Matériaux, Cristallochimie et Thermodynamique Appliquée, LR15ES01, 2092 Tunis, Tunisia;2. Departamento de Química Física, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Zaragoza, 50009 Zaragoza, Spain;1. PG & Research Department of Physics, National College (Affiliated to Bharathidasan University), Karumandapam, Tiruchirapalli 620 001, Tamil Nadu, India;2. Department of Electronic and Communication Engineering, SEE, SASTRA University, Vallam, Thanjavur 613 401, Tamil Nadu, India
Abstract:Docking-based virtual screening is an established component of structure-based drug discovery. Nevertheless, scoring and ranking of computationally docked ligand libraries still suffer from many false positives. Identifying optimal docking parameters for a target protein prior to virtual screening can improve experimental hit rates. Here, we examine protocols for virtual screening against the important but challenging class of drug target, protein tyrosine phosphatases. In this study, common interaction features were identified from analysis of protein–ligand binding geometries of more than 50 complexed phosphatase crystal structures. It was found that two interactions were consistently formed across all phosphatase inhibitors: (1) a polar contact with the conserved arginine residue, and (2) at least one interaction with the P-loop backbone amide. In order to investigate the significance of these features on phosphatase-ligand binding, a series of seeded virtual screening experiments were conducted on three phosphatase enzymes, PTP1B, Cdc25b and IF2. It was observed that when the conserved arginine and P-loop amide interactions were used as pharmacophoric constraints during docking, enrichment of the virtual screen significantly increased in the three studied phosphatases, by up to a factor of two in some cases. Additionally, the use of such pharmacophoric constraints considerably improved the ability of docking to predict the inhibitor's bound pose, decreasing RMSD to the crystallographic geometry by 43% on average. Constrained docking improved enrichment of screens against both open and closed conformations of PTP1B. Incorporation of an ordered water molecule in PTP1B screening was also found to generally improve enrichment. The knowledge-based computational strategies explored here can potentially inform structure-based design of new phosphatase inhibitors using docking-based virtual screening.
Keywords:Protein tyrosine phosphatase  PTP1B  Virtual screening  Docking  Pharmacophore  Constraint
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