Molecular Dynamics Simulations Show That Conformational Selection Governs the Binding Preferences of Imatinib for Several Tyrosine Kinases

被引:69
作者
Aleksandrov, Alexey [1 ]
Simonson, Thomas [1 ]
机构
[1] Ecole Polytech, CNRS, Dept Biol, Lab Biochim,UMR7654, F-91128 Palaiseau, France
关键词
FREE-ENERGY CALCULATIONS; INDUCED FIT MECHANISM; LIGAND-BINDING; C-SRC; STI-571; INHIBITION; STRUCTURAL BASIS; SURFACE-AREA; BCR-ABL; RESISTANCE; DOMAIN;
D O I
10.1074/jbc.M110.109660
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
mechanism, involving their phosphorylation and switching between inactive and active conformations. The cancer drug imatinib binds tightly to several homologous kinases, including Abl, but weakly to others, including Src. Imatinib specifically targets the inactive, so-called "DFG-out" conformation of Abl, which differs from the preferred, "DFG-in" conformation of Src in the orientation of a conserved Asp-Phe-Gly (DFG) activation loop. However, recent x-ray structures showed that Src can also adopt the DFG-out conformation and uses it to bind imatinib. The Src/Abl-binding free energy difference can thus be decomposed into two contributions. Contribution i measures the different protein-imatinib interactions when either kinase is in its DFG-out conformation. Contribution ii depends on the ability of imatinib to select or induce this conformation, i. e. on the relative stabilities of the DFG-out and DFG-in conformations of each kinase. Neither contribution has been measured experimentally. We use molecular dynamics simulations to show that contribution i is very small, 0.2 +/- 0.6 kcal/mol; imatinib interactions are very similar in the two kinases, including long range electrostatic interactions with the imatinib positive charge. Contribution ii, deduced using the experimental binding free energy difference, is much larger, 4.4 +/- 0.9 kcal/mol. Thus, conformational selection, easy in Abl, difficult in Src, underpins imatinib specificity. Contribution ii has a simple interpretation; it closely approximates the stability difference between the DFG-out and DFG- in conformations of apo-Src. Additional calculations show that conformational selection also governs the relative binding of imatinib to the kinases c-Kit and Lck. These results should help clarify the current framework for engineering kinase signaling.
引用
收藏
页码:13807 / 13815
页数:9
相关论文
共 80 条
[1]  
ALEKSANDROV A, 2010, J COMP CHEM IN PRESS
[2]   Alchemical free energy simulations for biological complexes: powerful but temperamental ... [J].
Aleksandrov, Alexey ;
Thompson, Damien ;
Simonson, Thomas .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR RECOGNITION, 2010, 23 (02) :117-127
[3]   Binding free energies and free energy components from molecular dynamics and Poisson-Boltzmann calculations. Application to amino acid recognition by aspartyl-tRNA synthetase [J].
Archontis, G ;
Simonson, T ;
Karplus, M .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2001, 306 (02) :307-327
[4]   Mechanisms of autoinhibition and STI-571/imatinib resistance revealed by mutagenesis of BCR-ABL [J].
Azam, M ;
Latek, RR ;
Daley, GQ .
CELL, 2003, 112 (06) :831-843
[5]   Activity of dual SRC-ABL inhibitors highlights the role of BCR/ABL kinase dynamics in drug resistance [J].
Azam, Mohammad ;
Nardi, Valentina ;
Shakespeare, William C. ;
Metcalf, Chester A., III ;
Bohacek, Regine S. ;
Wang, Yihan ;
Sundaramoorthi, Raji ;
Sliz, Piotr ;
Veach, Darren R. ;
Bornmann, William G. ;
Clarkson, Bayard ;
Dalgarno, David C. ;
Sawyer, Tomi K. ;
Daley, George Q. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2006, 103 (24) :9244-9249
[6]   The N-terminal end of the catalytic domain of Src kinase Hck is a conformational switch implicated in long-range allosteric regulation [J].
Banavali, NK ;
Roux, B .
STRUCTURE, 2005, 13 (11) :1715-1723
[7]   FINITE REPRESENTATION OF AN INFINITE BULK SYSTEM - SOLVENT BOUNDARY POTENTIAL FOR COMPUTER-SIMULATIONS [J].
BEGLOV, D ;
ROUX, B .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1994, 100 (12) :9050-9063
[8]   The role of dynamic conformational ensembles in biomolecular recognition [J].
Boehr, David D. ;
Nussinov, Ruth ;
Wright, Peter E. .
NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY, 2009, 5 (11) :789-796
[9]   CHARMM: The Biomolecular Simulation Program [J].
Brooks, B. R. ;
Brooks, C. L., III ;
Mackerell, A. D., Jr. ;
Nilsson, L. ;
Petrella, R. J. ;
Roux, B. ;
Won, Y. ;
Archontis, G. ;
Bartels, C. ;
Boresch, S. ;
Caflisch, A. ;
Caves, L. ;
Cui, Q. ;
Dinner, A. R. ;
Feig, M. ;
Fischer, S. ;
Gao, J. ;
Hodoscek, M. ;
Im, W. ;
Kuczera, K. ;
Lazaridis, T. ;
Ma, J. ;
Ovchinnikov, V. ;
Paci, E. ;
Pastor, R. W. ;
Post, C. B. ;
Pu, J. Z. ;
Schaefer, M. ;
Tidor, B. ;
Venable, R. M. ;
Woodcock, H. L. ;
Wu, X. ;
Yang, W. ;
York, D. M. ;
Karplus, M. .
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY, 2009, 30 (10) :1545-1614
[10]   Continuum solvation models in the linear interaction energy method [J].
Carlsson, Jens ;
Ander, Martin ;
Nervall, Martin ;
Aqvist, Johan .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 2006, 110 (24) :12034-12041