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Elucidating the Molecular Interactions between Uremic Toxins and the Sudlow II Binding Site of Human Serum Albumin
Author(s) -
Josh Smith,
Jim Pfaendtner
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c02015
Subject(s) - uremic toxins , human serum albumin , albumin , chemistry , serum albumin , human albumin , biophysics , biochemistry , medicine , hemodialysis , biology
Protein bound uremic toxins (PBUTs) have been correlated to poor clinical outcomes for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and are not susceptible to the traditional dialysis techniques. Several PBUTs are known to bind strongly with the primary drug carrying sites of human serum albumin (HSA): Sudlow site I and Sudlow site II. A detailed energetic and structural description of PBUT interactions with these binding sites would provide useful insight into the design of materials that specifically displace and capture PBUTs. In this work, we used molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to study in atomistic detail four PBUTs bound in Sudlow site II. Specifically, we used the experimentally resolved X-ray structure of simulated indoxyl sulfate (IS) bound to Sudlow site II (PDB ID: 2BXH) to generate initial binding poses for p -cresyl sulfate (pCS), indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), and hippuric acid (HA). We calculated the interaction energy between toxin and protein in MD simulations and performed mean shift clustering on the collection of molecular structures from MD to identify the primary binding modes of each toxin. We find that all four toxins are primarily stabilized by electrostatic interactions between their anionic moiety and the hydrophilic residues in Sudlow site II. We observed transience in the strongest toxin-protein interaction, a charge-pairing with the positively charged R410 residue. We confirm the finding that the primary binding pose of IS in Sudlow site II is stabilized by a hydrogen bond with the carbonyl oxygen of L430 and find that this is also true for IAA. We provide insight into the chemical functional groups that might be incorporated to improve the specificity of synthetic materials for PBUT capture. This work represents a next step toward the de novo design of solutions to the problem of PBUT management in CKD patients.

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