Journal:CHEMBIOINT:2

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<b>Molecular Tour</b><br>
<b>Molecular Tour</b><br>
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Although the three-dimensional structures of mouse and Torpedo californica
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acetylcholinesterase are very similar, their responses to the covalent sulfonylating agents
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benzenesulfonyl fluoride and phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride are qualitatively different.
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Both agents inhibit the mouse enzyme effectively by covalent modification of its active
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site serine. In contrast, whereas the Torpedo enzyme is effectively inhibited by
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benzenesulfonyl fluoride, it is almost completely resistant to phenylmethylsulfonyl
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fluoride. A bottleneck midway down the active-site gorge in both enzymes restricts access
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of ligands to the active site at the bottom of the gorge. Molecular dynamics simulations
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revealed that the mouse enzyme is substantially more flexible than the Torpedo enzyme,
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suggesting that enhanced ‘breathing motions’ of the mouse enzyme relative to the Torpedo
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enzyme may explain why phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride can reach the active site in mouse
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acetylcholinesterase, but not in the Torpedo enzyme. Accordingly, we performed docking
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of the two sulfonylating agents to the two enzymes, followed by molecular dynamics
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simulations. Whereas benzenesulfonyl fluoride closely approaches the active-site serine in
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both mouse and Torpedo acetylcholinesterase in such simulations, phenylmethylsulfonyl
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fluoride is able to approach the active-site serine of mouse acetylcholinesterase, but
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remains trapped above the bottleneck in the Torpedo enzyme. Our studies demonstrate that
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reliance on docking tools in drug design can produce misleading information. Docking
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studies should, therefore, also be complemented by molecular dynamics simulations in
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selection of lead compounds.
<b>References</b><br>
<b>References</b><br>

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