A. Dunge , C. Phan , O. Uwangue , M. Bjelcic , J. Gunnarsson , G. Wehlander , H. Käck , G. Brändén
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引用次数: 0
摘要
基于结构的药物设计在很大程度上依赖于相关蛋白质与先导化合物的复合结构。理想情况下,这些信息可用于指导化合物的化学优化,使其成为候选药物。目前使用的主要结构方法--传统 X 射线晶体学--的局限性在于,它只能提供冷冻状态下蛋白质复合物的结构信息。序列晶体学是一种相对较新的方法,它提供了在室温(RT)下研究蛋白质结构的可能性。在这里,我们探讨了如何利用序列晶体学确定药物目标--可溶性环氧化物水解酶的结构。我们介绍了一种新方法来筛选适用于序列晶体学的最佳微晶条件,并展示了目标蛋白质的一些 RT 配体结合结构。通过对比 RT 结构数据和之前发表的低温结构,我们描述了配体结合模式随温度变化而不同的一个实例,并观察到柔性环在 RT 条件下得到了更好的解析。最后,我们讨论了串行晶体学用于药物发现的当前局限性和未来的潜在进展。
Exploring serial crystallography for drug discovery
In this work, serial crystallography is applied to a drug discovery target and the room-temperature ligand-bound complexes are used to explore temperature-dependent structural differences.
Structure-based drug design is highly dependent on the availability of structures of the protein of interest in complex with lead compounds. Ideally, this information can be used to guide the chemical optimization of a compound into a pharmaceutical drug candidate. A limitation of the main structural method used today – conventional X-ray crystallography – is that it only provides structural information about the protein complex in its frozen state. Serial crystallography is a relatively new approach that offers the possibility to study protein structures at room temperature (RT). Here, we explore the use of serial crystallography to determine the structures of the pharmaceutical target, soluble epoxide hydrolase. We introduce a new method to screen for optimal microcrystallization conditions suitable for use in serial crystallography and present a number of RT ligand-bound structures of our target protein. From a comparison between the RT structural data and previously published cryo-temperature structures, we describe an example of a temperature-dependent difference in the ligand-binding mode and observe that flexible loops are better resolved at RT. Finally, we discuss the current limitations and potential future advances of serial crystallography for use within pharmaceutical drug discovery.
期刊介绍:
IUCrJ is a new fully open-access peer-reviewed journal from the International Union of Crystallography (IUCr).
The journal will publish high-profile articles on all aspects of the sciences and technologies supported by the IUCr via its commissions, including emerging fields where structural results underpin the science reported in the article. Our aim is to make IUCrJ the natural home for high-quality structural science results. Chemists, biologists, physicists and material scientists will be actively encouraged to report their structural studies in IUCrJ.