Istituto di Chimica del Riconoscimento Molecolare, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Via Mario Bianco 19, Milan, Italy.
Curr Med Chem. 2010;17(1):25-41. doi: 10.2174/092986710789957797.
Molecular recognition and ligand binding involving proteins underlie the most important life processes within the cell, such as substrate transport, catalysis, signal transmission, receptor trafficking, gene regulation, switching on and off of biochemical pathways. Despite recent successes in predicting the structures of many protein-substrate complexes, the dynamic aspects of binding have been largely neglected by computational/theoretical investigations. Recently, several groups have started tackling these problems with the use of experimental and simulation methods and developed models describing the variation of protein dynamics upon complex formation, shedding light on how substrate or inhibitor binding can alter protein flexibility and function. The study of ligand-induced dynamic variations has also been exploited to review the concept of allosteric changes, in the absence of major conformational changes. In this context, the study of the influence of protein motions on signal transduction and on catalytic activities has been used to develop pharmacophore models based on ensembles of protein conformations. These models, taking flexibility explicitly into account, are able to distinguish active inhibitors versus nonactive drug-like compounds, to define new molecular motifs and to preferentially identify specific ligands for a certain protein target. The application of these methods holds great promise in advancing structure-based drug discovery and medicinal chemistry in general, opening up the possibility to explore broader chemical spaces than is normally done in an efficient way. In this review, examples illustrating the extent to which simulations can be used to understand these phenomena will be presented along with examples of methodological developments to increase physical understanding of the processes and improve the possibility to rationally design new molecules.
分子识别和配体结合是细胞内最重要的生命过程的基础,例如底物运输、催化、信号传递、受体运输、基因调控、生化途径的开关。尽管最近在预测许多蛋白质-底物复合物的结构方面取得了成功,但计算/理论研究在很大程度上忽略了结合的动态方面。最近,一些小组开始使用实验和模拟方法来解决这些问题,并开发了描述复合物形成时蛋白质动力学变化的模型,揭示了底物或抑制剂结合如何改变蛋白质的灵活性和功能。配体诱导的动态变化的研究也被用来回顾变构变化的概念,而无需发生主要的构象变化。在这种情况下,研究蛋白质运动对信号转导和催化活性的影响已被用于开发基于蛋白质构象集合的药效团模型。这些模型明确考虑了灵活性,能够区分活性抑制剂与非活性药物样化合物,定义新的分子基序,并优先为特定的蛋白质靶标识别特定的配体。这些方法的应用在推进基于结构的药物发现和一般的药物化学方面具有巨大的前景,为探索更广泛的化学空间提供了可能性,而这在通常的方式下是不可能做到的。在这篇综述中,将展示一些示例来说明模拟在理解这些现象方面的应用程度,以及为了提高对这些过程的物理理解和提高合理设计新分子的可能性而进行的方法学发展的示例。