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Download fileSMD-Based Interaction-Energy Fingerprints Can Predict Accurately the Dissociation Rate Constants of HIV‑1 Protease Inhibitors
journal contribution
posted on 2018-11-13, 00:00 authored by Shuheng Huang, Duo Zhang, Hu Mei, MuliadiYeremia Kevin, Sujun Qu, Xianchao Pan, Laichun LuRecent
research has increasingly suggested that the crucial factors
affecting drug potencies are related not only to the thermodynamic
properties but also to the kinetic properties. Therefore, in silico
prediction of ligand-binding kinetic properties, especially the dissociation
rate constant (koff), has aroused more
and more attention. However, there are still a lot of challenges that
need to be addressed. In this paper, steered molecular dynamics (SMD)
combined with residue-based energy decomposition was employed to predict
the dissociation rate constants of 37 HIV-1 protease inhibitors (HIV-1
PIs). For the first time, a predictive model of the dissociation rate
constant was established by using the interaction-energy fingerprints
sampled along the ligand dissociation pathway. On the basis of the
key fingerprints extracted it can be inferred that the dissociation
rates of 37 HIV-1 PIs are basically determined in the first half of
the dissociation processes and that the H-bond interactions with active-site
Asp25 and van der Waals interactions with flap-region Ile47 and Ile50
have important influences on the dissociation processes. In general,
the strategy established in this paper can provide an efficient way
for the prediction of dissociation rate constants as well as the unbinding
mechanism research.