Recognition of ribonuclease A by 3′-5′-pyrophosphate-linked dinucleotide inhibitors: A molecular dynamics/continuum electrostatics analysis

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Abstract

The proteins of the pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase A) family catalyze the cleavage of the RNA polymer chain. The development of RNase inhibitors is of significant interest, as some of these compounds may have a therapeutic effect in pathological conditions associated with these proteins. The most potent low molecular weight inhibitor of RNase reported to date is the compound 5′-phospho-2′-deoxyuridine-3-pyrophosphate (P→5)-adenosine-3- phosphate (pdUppA-3′-p). The 3′,5′-pyrophosphate group of this compound increases its affinity and introduces structural features which seem to be unique in pyrophosphate-containing ligands bound to RNase A, such as the adoption of a syn conformation by the adenosine base at RNase subsite B 2 and the placement of the 5′-β-phosphate of the adenylate (instead of the α-phosphate) at subsite P1 where the phosphodiester bond cleavage occurs. In this work, we study by multi-ns molecular dynamics simulations the structural properties of RNase A complexes with the ligand pdUppA-3′-p and the related weaker inhibitor dUppA, which lacks the 3′ and 5′ terminal phosphate groups of pdUppA-3′-p. The simulations show that the adenylate 5′-β-phosphate binding position and the adenosine syn orientation constitute robust structural features in both complexes, stabilized by persistent interactions with specific active-site residues of subsites P1 and B2. The simulation structures are used in conjunction with a continuum-electrostatics (Poisson-Boltzmann) model, to evaluate the relative binding affinity of the two complexes. The computed relative affinity of pdUppA-3′-p varies between -7.9 kcal/mol and -2.8 kcal/mol for a range of protein/ligand dielectric constants (εp) 2-20, in good agreement with the experimental value (-3.6 kcal/mol); the agreement becomes exact with εep = 8. The success of the continuum-electrostatics model suggests that the differences in affinity of the two ligands originate mainly from electrostatic interactions. A residue decomposition of the electrostatic free energies shows that the terminal phosphate groups of pdUppA-3′-p make increased interactions with residues Lys7 and Lys66 of the more remote sites P2 and P0, and His119 of site P1. © 2007 by the Biophysical Society.

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Polydoridis, S., Leonidas, D. D., Oikonomakos, N. G., & Archontis, G. (2007). Recognition of ribonuclease A by 3′-5′-pyrophosphate-linked dinucleotide inhibitors: A molecular dynamics/continuum electrostatics analysis. Biophysical Journal, 92(5), 1659–1672. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.106.093419

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