Designed antiviral ankyrin – A computational approach to combat HIV-1 via intracellular pathway by targeting the viral capsid of HIV-1
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2019
Abstract
Scaffold known as designed ankyrin repeat proteins (DARPins) have been utilized by scientists extensively in protein binding, as they acquire remarkable binding properties. Trimodular ankyrin repeat protein (Ank1D4) is a potential macromolecular and antiviral intracellular inhibitor that aims the N-terminal domain capsid protein (NTDCA) of viral Human Immunodeficiency Virus type-1 (HIV-1) at the virus assembly and budding machinery process. The protein-protein interaction between Ank1D4 and the viral capsid CA alpha helixes H1 and H7 have been studied in depth and point mutation strategy at the S451D4 key residue position was conducted to further improve the binding interaction and efficacy on the wildtype Ank1D4 structure with NTDCA. A computational approach via molecular dynamics (MD) simulation has been fully utilized in this study to simulate both the wildtype and potential novel complexes. Free energy contributions on the modified Ank1D4-NTDCA (H1, H7) complexes were acquired by using vigorous scoring functions of implicit solvent models; Molecular Mechanics/Poisson-Boltzmann surface area (MM-PBSA) and Molecular Mechanics/Generalized Born surface area (MM-GBSA), respectively. The wildtype structure of Ank1D4-NTDCA H7 has been proven to possess better binding stability than the H1 complex. From there, two mutants of H7 complex were generated and the computed ∆Gbind values based on both models have revealed that S45Y-H7 has the lowest binding free energy compared to both S45W-H7 and S45-H7 (Wildtype). The binding strength predictions given by both MM-PBSA and MM-GBSA in the following ranking order for the three systems in terms of the value of ∆Gbind: S45Y-H7 > S45 W-H7 > S45-H7. These findings provide a good basis in directing us a step further to discover better novel treatment modalities to treat millions of HIV-1 patients.
Keywords
Ankyrins, Ank1D4, Capsid protein, HIV-1, Molecular dynamics (MD)
Divisions
CHEMISTRY
Funders
University of Malaya (UMRG:RP037D-17AFR),Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MOSTI under FRGS:FP007-2015A), Malaysia
Publication Title
Journal of Molecular Liquids
Volume
277
Publisher
Elsevier