posted on 2022-05-27, 19:05authored byQi Gao, Ann E. Cleves, Xiao Wang, Yizhou Liu, Sean Bowen, Robert Thomas Williamson, Ajay N. Jain, Edward Sherer, Mikhail Reibarkh
Aureobasidin A (abA) is a natural
depsipeptide that inhibits inositol
phosphorylceramide (IPC) synthases with significant broad-spectrum
antifungal activity. abA is known to have two distinct conformations
in solution corresponding to trans- and cis-proline (Pro) amide bond rotamers. While the trans-Pro conformation has been studied extensively, cis-Pro conformers have remained elusive. Conformational properties
of cyclic peptides are known to strongly affect both potency and cell
permeability, making a comprehensive characterization of abA conformation
highly desirable. Here, we report a high-resolution 3D structure of
the cis-Pro conformer of aureobasidin A elucidated
for the first time using a recently developed NMR-driven computational
approach. This approach utilizes ForceGen’s advanced conformational
sampling of cyclic peptides augmented by sparse distance and torsion
angle constraints derived from NMR data. The obtained 3D conformational
structure of cis-Pro abA has been validated using
anisotropic residual dipolar coupling measurements. Support for the
biological relevance of both the cis-Pro and trans-Pro abA configurations was obtained through molecular
similarity experiments, which showed a significant 3D similarity between
NMR-restrained abA conformational ensembles and another IPC synthase
inhibitor, pleofungin A. Such ligand-based comparisons can further
our understanding of the important steric and electrostatic characteristics
of abA and can be utilized in the design of future therapeutics.