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  5. Virtual Screening Using Combinatorial Cyclic Peptide Libraries Reveals Protein Interfaces Readily Targetable by Cyclic Peptides
 
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Virtual Screening Using Combinatorial Cyclic Peptide Libraries Reveals Protein Interfaces Readily Targetable by Cyclic Peptides

Author(s)
Duffy, Fergal J.  
O'Donovan, Darragh  
Devocelle, Marc  
Moran, Niamh  
O'Connell, David J.  
Shields, Denis C.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/7474
Date Issued
2015-02-10
Date Available
2016-02-10T09:23:40Z
Abstract
Protein–protein and protein–peptide interactions are responsible for the vast majority of biological functions in vivo, but targeting these interactions with small molecules has historically been difficult. What is required are efficient combined computational and experimental screening methods to choose among a number of potential protein interfaces worthy of targeting lead macrocyclic compounds for further investigation. To achieve this, we have generated combinatorial 3D virtual libraries of short disulfide-bonded peptides and compared them to pharmacophore models of important protein–protein and protein–peptide structures, including short linear motifs (SLiMs), protein-binding peptides, and turn structures at protein–protein interfaces, built from 3D models available in the Protein Data Bank. We prepared a total of 372 reference pharmacophores, which were matched against 108,659 multiconformer cyclic peptides. After normalization to exclude nonspecific cyclic peptides, the top hits notably are enriched for mimetics of turn structures, including a turn at the interaction surface of human α thrombin, and also feature several protein-binding peptides. The top cyclic peptide hits also cover the critical 'hot spot' interaction sites predicted from the interaction crystal structure. We have validated our method by testing cyclic peptides predicted to inhibit thrombin, a key protein in the blood coagulation pathway of important therapeutic interest, identifying a cyclic peptide inhibitor with lead-like activity. We conclude that protein interfaces most readily targetable by cyclic peptides and related macrocyclic drugs may be identified computationally among a set of candidate interfaces, accelerating the choice of interfaces against which lead compounds may be screened.
Sponsorship
Science Foundation Ireland
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Journal
Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling
Volume
55
Issue
3
Start Page
600
End Page
613
Copyright (Published Version)
2015 American Chemical Society
Subjects

Protein-protein inter...

Reference structures

Cyclic peptides

Pharmacophore models

Thrombin inhibitors

DOI
10.1021/ci500431q
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
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duffy_et_al_2015_JCIM_with_Figs_1-8__(1).pdf

Size

4.43 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

f1f40a279fcf10d80140b635bb14663b

Owning collection
Medicine Research Collection
Mapped collections
Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Research Collection•
CASL Research Collection•
Conway Institute Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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