posted on 2019-02-07, 00:00authored byMarco Tutone, Ivana Pibiri, Laura Lentini, Andrea Pace, Anna Maria Almerico
Ataluren
was reported to suppress nonsense mutations by promoting
the readthrough of premature stop codons, although its mechanism of
action (MOA) is still debated. The likely interaction of Ataluren
with CFTR-mRNA has been previously studied by molecular dynamics.
In this work we extended the modeling of Ataluren’s MOA by
complementary computational approaches such as induced fit docking
(IFD), quantum polarized ligand docking (QPLD), MM-GBSA free-energy
calculations, and computational mutagenesis. In addition to CFTR-mRNA,
this study considered other model targets implicated in the translation
process, such as eukaryotic rRNA 18S, prokaryotic rRNA 16S, and eukaryotic
Release Factor 1 (eRF1), and we performed a comparison with a new
promising Ataluren analogue (NV2445) and with a series of aminoglycosides,
known to suppress the normal proofreading function of the ribosome.
Results confirmed mRNA as the most likely candidate target for Ataluren
and its analogue, and binding energies calculated after computational
mutagenesis highlighted how Ataluren’s interaction with the
premature stop codon could be affected by ancillary nucleotides in
the genetic context.