Insights into the Functions of M-T Hook Structure in HIV Fusion Inhibitor Using Molecular Modeling
HIV-1 membrane fusion plays an important role in the process that HIV-1 entries host cells.As a treatment strategy targeting HIV-1 entry process,fusion inhibitors have been proposed.Nevertheless,development of a short peptide possessing high anti-HIV potency is considered a daunting challenge.He et al.found that two residues,Met626 and Thr627,located the upstream of the C-terminal heptad repeat of the gp41,formed a unique hook-like structure(M-T hook)that can dramatically improve the binding stability and anti-HIV activity of the inhibitors.In this work,we explored the molecular mechanism why M-T hook structure could improve the anti-HIV activity of inhibitors.Firstly,molecular dynamic simulation was used to obtain information on the time evolution between gp41 and ligands.Secondly,based on the simulations,molecular mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann surface area(MM-PBSA)and molecular mechanics Generalized Born surface area(MM-GBSA)methods were used to calculate the binding free energies.The binding free energy of the ligand with M-T hook was considerably higher than the other without M-T.Further studies showed that the hydrophobic interactions made the dominant contribution to the binding free energy.The numbers of Hydrogen bonds between gp41 and the ligand with M-T hook structure were more than the other.These findings should provide insights into the inhibition mechanism of the short peptide fusion inhibitors and be useful for the rational design of novel fusion inhibitors in the future.
Molecular dynamic simulation MM-PB/GBSA Binding free energy HIV-1 Fusion inhibitors
Jianjun Tan Hongling Yuan Chunhua Li Xiaoyi Zhang Cunxin Wang
College of life science and Bioengineering,Beijing University of Technology,Beijing,100124,China
国内会议
大连
英文
479-506
2016-09-24(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)