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Connectivity and binding-site recognition: Applications relevant to drug design

Authors :
Matthew P. Campbell
Paul D. Scott
Kevin E. B. Parkes
Christopher R. Snell
Christopher J. R. Illingworth
Christopher A. Reynolds
Source :
Journal of Computational Chemistry. 31:2677-2688
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Wiley, 2010.

Abstract

Here, we describe a family of methods based on residue-residue connectivity for characterizing binding sites and apply variants of the method to various types of protein-ligand complexes including proteases, allosteric-binding sites, correctly and incorrectly docked poses, and inhibitors of protein-protein interactions. Residues within ligand-binding sites have about 25% more contact neighbors than surface residues in general; high-connectivity residues are found in contact with the ligand in 84% of all complexes studied. In addition, a k-means algorithm was developed that may be useful for identifying potential binding sites with no obvious geometric or connectivity features. The analysis was primarily carried out on 61 protein-ligand structures from the MEROPS protease database, 250 protein-ligand structures from the PDBSelect (25%), and 30 protein-protein complexes. Analysis of four proteases with crystal structures for multiple bound ligands has shown that residues with high connectivity tend to have less variable side-chain conformation. The relevance to drug design is discussed in terms of identifying allosteric-binding sites, distinguishing between alternative docked poses and designing protein interface inhibitors. Taken together, this data indicate that residue-residue connectivity is highly relevant to medicinal chemistry.

Details

ISSN :
01928651
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Computational Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eeba27d1ff27fdcbb026b011d383d86d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jcc.21561