Unbound MEDLINE

Predicting ligand binding affinity with alchemical free energy methods in a polar model binding site. Journal of molecular biology [J Mol Biol] Journal article

 
TitlePredicting ligand binding affinity with alchemical free energy methods in a polar model binding site.
Author(s)Boyce SE, Mobley DL, Rocklin G, Graves AP, Dill KA, Shoichet BK 
InstitutionGraduate Group in Chemistry and Chemical Biology, University of California- San Francisco San Francisco, CA 94158-2518.
SourceJ Mol Biol 2009 Sep 23.
AbstractWe present a combined experimental and modeling study of organic ligand molecules binding to a slightly polar engineered cavity site in T4 lysozyme (L99A/M102Q). For modeling, we computed alchemical absolute binding free energies. These were blind tests performed prospectively on 13 diverse, previously untested candidate ligand molecules. We predicted that eight compounds would bind to the cavity and five would not; 11 of 13 predictions were correct at this level. The RMS error to the measurable absolute binding energies was 1.8 kcal/mol. In addition, we computed relative binding free energies for six phenol derivatives starting from two known ligands: phenol and catechol. The average RMS error in the relative free energy prediction was 2.5 (phenol) and 1.1 (catechol) kcal/mol. To understand these results at atomic resolution, we obtained x-ray co-complex structures for nine of the diverse ligands and for all six phenol analogs. The average RMSD of the predicted pose to the experiment was 2.0A (diverse set), 1.8A (phenol derived predictions) and 1.2A (catechol derived predictions). We found that to predict accurate affinities and rank-orderings required near-native starting orientations of the ligand in the binding site. Unanticipated binding modes, multiple ligand binding, and protein conformational change all proved challenging for the free energy methods. We believe these results can help guide future improvements in physics-based absolute binding free energy methods.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID19782087
  
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