Journal:Protein Science:2
From Proteopedia

The Impact of Crystallization Conditions on Structure-Based Drug Design: a Case Study on the Methylene Blue/Acetylcholinesterase ComplexOrly Dym, Wanling Song, Clifford Felder, Esther Roth, Valery Shnyrov, Yacov, Ashani, Yechun Xu, Robbie P. Joosten, Lev Weiner, Joel L. Sussman, and Israel Silman [1] Molecular Tour Structure-based drug design utilizes experimental 3D apo-protein or complex structures that are usually retrieved from the PDB. Over 57% of the crystallographic PDB entries were obtained with polyethyleneglycols (PEGs) as precipitant and/or as cryoprotectant, but fewer than 6% of these report the presence of individual PEGs. We here report a case in which presence of PEG in a crystal structure markedly affected the bound ligand’s position. Specifically, we compared the positions of methylene blue and of decamethonium in the acetylcholinesterase complexes obtained using isomorphous crystals precipitated with PEG200 or ammonium sulfate. The ligands’ positions within the active-site gorge in complexes obtained using PEG200 as precipitant are influenced by the presence of ethyleneglycol oligomers. In both cases, an ethyleneglycol dimer is bound to W84 at the gorge’s bottom, preventing their proximal quaternary groups’ interaction with its indole. Consequently, both ligands are ~2.5 Å further up the gorge than in complexes obtained using crystals precipitated with ammonium sulfate, in which these quaternary groups make a direct π-cation interaction with the indole. These findings have implications for structure-based drug design, since data for ligand-protein complexes with PEG as precipitant may not reflect the ligand’s position in its absence, and could result in selection of incorrect lead compounds for drug discovery. Docking methylene blue into the protein structure of the complex obtained with PEG200, but omitting the ethyleneglycol dimer yields results in poor agreement with the crystal structure; excellent agreement is obtained if the ethyleneglycol dimer is included. Many proteins display structural elements in which precipitants like PEG might lodge. It will be important to investigate presence of precipitants in published crystal structures, and whether it has resulted in misinterpretation of electron density maps, thus adversely affecting drug design. In certain crystal structures of complexes for which the native crystals have been generated using PEG as the precipitant, PEG oligomers can be seen within the gorge. For example, in the galanthamine/TcAChE complex (1dx6), a . The galanthamine is shown in space-filling format in green, and above it a PEG tetramer in magenta. The DECA molecule in the DECA-AS/TcAChE structure (5e4j) is aligned along the axis of the active-site gorge, spanning the CAS and the PAS. The DECA makes non-bonded interactions with six of the conserved aromatic residues that line the gorge surface, viz., . In the DECA-PEG/TcAChE structure (5e2i) a , between the proximal quaternary group of the DECA and the indole ring of Trp84. DECA molecule is colored red, and the PEG moiety blue. Due to the presence of the PEG molecule oligomer at the bottom of the gorge in the DECA-PEG/TcAChE structure, the DECA molecule is positioned further up the gorge than in the DECA-AS/TcAChE structure. . . The DECA in the DECA-PEG/TcAChE structure is shown as red ball-and-sticks, and the PEG oligomers as blue ball-and-sticks. The DECA in the DECA-AS/TcAChE structure is shown as cyan ball-and-sticks. (5dlp). The MB molecule is colored purple. In MB-PEG/TcAChE complex (5e4t) . Consequently, the than in the MB-AS/TcAChE complex. |
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