Apr 2005
Pairwise Decomposition of Residue Interaction Energies Using Semiempirical Quantum Mechanical Methods in Studies of Protein-Ligand Interaction
April 15, 2005 Filed In:PWD
Abstract: Pairwise decomposition of
the interaction energy between molecules is shown to
be a powerful tool that can increase our
understanding of macromolecular recognition
processes. Herein we calculate the pairwise
decomposition of the interaction energy between the
protein human carbonic anhydrase II (HCAII) and the
fluorine-substituted ligand
N-(4-sulfamylbenzoyl)benzylamine (SBB) using
semiempirical quantum mechanics based methods. We
dissect the interaction between the ligand and the
protein by dividing the ligand and the protein into
subsystems to understand the structure-activity
relationships as a result of fluorine substitution.
In particular, the off-diagonal elements of the Fock
matrix that is composed of the interaction between
the ionic core and the valence electrons and the
exchange energy between the subsystems or atoms of
interest is examined in detail. Our analysis reveals
that the fluorine-substituted benzylamine group of
SBB does not directly affect the binding energy.
Rather, we find that the strength of the interaction
between Thr199 of HCAII and the sulfamylbenzoyl group
of SBB affects the binding affinity between the
protein and the ligand. These observations underline
the importance of the sulfonamide group in binding
affinity as shown by previous experiments (Maren, T.
H.; Wiley: C. E. J. Med. Chem. 1968, 11,
228-232). Moreover, our calculations qualitatively
agree with the structural aspects of these
proteinligand complexes as determined by X-ray
crystallography.
Authors: Kaushik Raha, Arjan J. van der Vaart, Kevin E. Riley, Martin B. Peters, Lance M. Westerhoff, Hwanho Kim, and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 6583-6594. (see link for full paper).
Authors: Kaushik Raha, Arjan J. van der Vaart, Kevin E. Riley, Martin B. Peters, Lance M. Westerhoff, Hwanho Kim, and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 6583-6594. (see link for full paper).