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Contributions of water transfer energy to protein‐ligand association and dissociation barriers: Watermap analysis of a series of p38α MAP kinase inhibitors
Author(s) -
Pearlstein Robert A.,
Sherman Woody,
Abel Robert
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
proteins: structure, function, and bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.699
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1097-0134
pISSN - 0887-3585
DOI - 10.1002/prot.24276
Subject(s) - solvation , chemistry , dissociation (chemistry) , ligand (biochemistry) , molecule , computational chemistry , solvent , molecular dynamics , thermodynamics , organic chemistry , receptor , biochemistry , physics
In our previous work, we proposed that desolvation and resolvation of the binding sites of proteins can serve as the slowest steps during ligand association and dissociation, respectively, and tested this hypothesis on two protein‐ligand systems with known binding kinetics behavior. In the present work, we test this hypothesis on another kinetically‐determined protein‐ligand system—that of p38α and eight Type II BIRB 796 inhibitor analogs. The k on values among the inhibitor analogs are narrowly distributed (10 4 ≤ k on ≤ 10 5 M −1 s −1 ), suggesting a common rate‐determining step, whereas the k off values are widely distributed (10 −1 ≤ k off ≤ 10 −6 s −1 ), suggesting a spectrum of rate‐determining steps. We calculated the solvation properties of the DFG‐out protein conformation using an explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulation and thermodynamic analysis method implemented in WaterMap to predict the enthalpic and entropic costs of water transfer to and from bulk solvent incurred upon association and dissociation of each inhibitor. The results suggest that the rate‐determining step for association consists of the transfer of a common set of enthalpically favorable solvating water molecules from the binding site to bulk solvent. The rate‐determining step for inhibitor dissociation consists of the transfer of water from bulk solvent to specific binding site positions that are unfavorably solvated in the apo protein, and evacuated during ligand association. Different sets of unfavorable solvation are evacuated by each ligand, and the observed dissociation barriers are qualitatively consistent with the calculated solvation free energies of those sets.

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