Title of article :
Effect of Biomolecular Conformation on Docking Simulation: A Case Study on a Potent HIV-1 Protease Inhibitor
Author/Authors :
Razzaghi-Asl, Nima Department of Medicinal Chemistry - School of Pharmacy - Ardabil University of Medical Sciences, Ardabil - Drug and Advanced Sciences Research Center - School of Pharmacy - Ardabil University of Medical Sciences , Sepehri, Saghi Department of Medicinal Chemistry - Faculty of Pharmacy - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Ebadi, Ahmad Department of Medicinal Chemistry - School of Pharmacy - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences , Miri, Ramin Medicinal and Natural Products Chemistry Research Center - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz - Department of Medicinal Chemistry - School of Pharmacy - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Shahabipour, Sara Department of Medicinal Chemistry - School of Pharmacy - Ardabil University of Medical Sciences
Pages :
18
From page :
785
To page :
802
Abstract :
Human immunodeficiency virus infection/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/ AIDS) is a disease pertained to the human immune system. Given its crucial role in viral replication, HIV-1 protease (HIV-1 PR) is a prime therapeutic target in AIDS therapy. In this regard, the dynamic aspects of ligand-enzyme interactions may indicate an important role of conformational variability in HIV-1 PR inhibitor/drug design. In the present contribution, the effect of HIV-1 PR flexibility (within multiple crystallographic structures of HIV-1 PR) on binding to the Amprenavir was elucidated via an ensemble docking approach. Molecular docking studies were performed via advanced AutoDock4.2 software. Ensemble docking of Amprenavir into the active site of various conformations of HIV-1 PR predicted different interaction modes/ energies. Analysis of binding factors in terms of docking false negatives/positives revealed a determinant role of enzyme conformational variation in prediction of optimum induced fit (PDB ID: 1HPV). The outcomes of this study demonstrated that conformation of receptor may significantly affect the accuracy of docking/binding results in structure-based rational design of anti HIV-1 PR agents. Furthermore; some strategies to re-score the docking results in HIV-1 PR targeted docking studies were proposed.
Keywords :
AIDS , HIV-1 PR , Conformational variation , Amprenavir , Docking
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Serial Year :
2015
Record number :
2417032
Link To Document :
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