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Molecular mechanics analysis of inhibitor binding to HIV-1 protease
Authors:Sansom, Clare E.   Wu, Jin   Weber, Irene T.
Affiliation:1Jefferson Cancer Institute, Thomas Jefferson University Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA 2Macromolecular Structure Laboratory, NCI-Frederick Cancer Research Facility Frederick, MD 21702, USA 3Present address: Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Leeds Leeds, UK
Abstract:Crystallographic structures of HIV protease with three differentpeptide-mimetic inhibitors were subjected to energy minimizationusing molecular mechanics, the minimized structures analyzedand the inhibitor binding energies calculated. Partial chargeassignment for the hydrogen bonded catalytic aspartk acids,Asp25 and -25', was in good agreement with charge calculationsusing semi-empirical molecular orbital methods. Root mean squaredeviations on minimization were small and similar for both subunitsin the protease dimer. The surface loops, which had the largestB factors, changed most on minimization; the hydrophobic coreand the inhibitor binding site showed little change. The distance-dependentdielectric of D(r) = 4r was found to be preferable to D(r) =r. Distance restraints were applied for the intermolecular hydrogenbonds to maintain the conformation of the inhibitor bindingsite. Using the dielectric of D(r) = 4r, the calculated interactionenergy of the three inhibitors with the protease ranged from–53 to –56 kcal/mol. The {Psi} groups of the inhibitorswere changed to add or remove a ‘transition state analogue’hydroxyl group, and the loss in energy on the removal of thisgroup was calculated to be 0.9–1.7 kcal/mol. This wouldrepresent 19–36% of the total measured difference in bindingenergy between the inhibitors JG365 and MVT-101.
Keywords:aspartic proteases/  HIV-1/  inhibitor binding/  molecular mechanics
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