Todd M J, Semo N, Freire E
Department of Biology and Biocalorimetry Center, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 21218, USA.
J Mol Biol. 1998 Oct 23;283(2):475-88. doi: 10.1006/jmbi.1998.2090.
The most common strategy in the development of HIV-1 protease inhibitors has been the design of high affinity transition state analogs that effectively compete with natural substrates for the active site. A second approach has been the development of compounds that inactivate the protease by destabilizing its quaternary or tertiary structure. A successful optimization of these strategies requires an accurate knowledge of the energetics of structural stabilization and binding, and the identification of those regions in the protease molecule that are critical to stability and function. Here the energetics of stabilization of the HIV-1 protease has been measured for the first time by high sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry. These studies have permitted the evaluation of the different components of the Gibbs energy of stabilization (the enthalpy, entropy and heat capacity changes). The stability of the protease is pH-dependent and due to its dimeric nature is also concentration-dependent. At pH 3.4 the Gibbs energy of stabilization is close to 10 kcal/mol at 25 degreesC, consistent with a dissociation constant of 5x10(-8) M. The stability of the protease increases at higher pH values. At pH 5, the Gibbs energy of stabilization is 14.5 kcal/mol at 25 degreesC, consistent with a dissociation constant of 2.3x10(-11) M. The pH dependence of the Gibbs energy of stabilization indicates that between pH 3.4 and pH 5 an average of 3-4 ionizable groups per dimer become protonated upon unfolding. A structure-based thermodynamic analysis of the protease molecule indicates that most of the Gibbs energy of stabilization is provided by the dimerization interface and that the isolated subunits are intrinsically unstable. The Gibbs energy, however, is not uniformly distributed along the dimerization interface. The dimer interface is characterized by the presence of clusters of residues (hot spots) that contribute significantly and other regions that contribute very little to subunit association. At the dimerization interface, residues located at the carboxy and amino termini contribute close to 75% of the total Gibbs energy (Cys95, Thr96, Leu97, Asn98 and Phe99 and Pro1, Ile3, Leu5). Residues Thr26, Gly27 and Asp29 located at the base of the active site are also important, and to a lesser extent Gly49, Ile50, Gly51 located at the tip of the flap region. The structure-based thermodynamic analysis also predicts the existence of regions of the protease with only marginal stability and a high propensity to undergo independent local unfolding. In particular, the flap region occupies a very shallow energy minimum and its conformation can easily be affected by relatively small perturbations. This property of the protease can be related to the ability of some mutations to elicit resistance towards certain inhibitors.
开发HIV-1蛋白酶抑制剂最常用的策略是设计高亲和力的过渡态类似物,使其能与天然底物有效竞争活性位点。第二种方法是开发通过破坏蛋白酶的四级或三级结构来使其失活的化合物。成功优化这些策略需要准确了解结构稳定和结合的能量学,以及鉴定蛋白酶分子中对稳定性和功能至关重要的区域。在此,首次通过高灵敏度差示扫描量热法测量了HIV-1蛋白酶的稳定能量学。这些研究使得能够评估稳定吉布斯自由能的不同组成部分(焓、熵和热容变化)。蛋白酶的稳定性依赖于pH,并且由于其二聚体性质也依赖于浓度。在pH 3.4时,25℃下的稳定吉布斯自由能接近10 kcal/mol,解离常数为5×10⁻⁸ M。蛋白酶的稳定性在较高pH值时增加。在pH 5时,25℃下的稳定吉布斯自由能为14.5 kcal/mol,解离常数为2.3×10⁻¹¹ M。稳定吉布斯自由能对pH的依赖性表明,在pH 3.4和pH 5之间,每个二聚体平均有3 - 4个可电离基团在去折叠时质子化。基于结构的蛋白酶分子热力学分析表明,大部分稳定吉布斯自由能由二聚化界面提供,并且分离的亚基本质上是不稳定的。然而,吉布斯自由能并非沿着二聚化界面均匀分布。二聚化界面的特征是存在对亚基缔合有显著贡献的残基簇(热点)和其他贡献很小的区域。在二聚化界面,位于羧基和氨基末端的残基贡献了接近总吉布斯自由能的75%(Cys95、Thr96、Leu97、Asn98和Phe99以及Pro1、Ile3、Leu5)。位于活性位点底部的残基Thr26、Gly27和Asp29也很重要,在较小程度上位于瓣区顶端的Gly49、Ile50、Gly51也很重要。基于结构的热力学分析还预测了蛋白酶中仅具有边缘稳定性且极易发生独立局部去折叠的区域的存在。特别是,瓣区处于非常浅的能量最小值,其构象很容易受到相对较小扰动的影响。蛋白酶的这一特性可能与某些突变引发对某些抑制剂的抗性的能力有关。