Probing protein flexibility reveals a mechanism for selective promiscuity

Many eukaryotic regulatory proteins adopt distinct bound and unbound conformations, and use this structural flexibility to bind specifically to multiple partners. However, we lack an understanding of how an interface can select some ligands, but not others. Here, we present a molecular dynamics appr...

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Main Authors: Nicolas A Pabon, Carlos J Camacho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eLife Sciences Publications Ltd 2017-04-01
Series:eLife
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elifesciences.org/articles/22889
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spelling doaj-b6d5b60c143c4276a9c3fadbeb895f282021-05-05T13:25:33ZengeLife Sciences Publications LtdeLife2050-084X2017-04-01610.7554/eLife.22889Probing protein flexibility reveals a mechanism for selective promiscuityNicolas A Pabon0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2591-4349Carlos J Camacho1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1741-8529Department of Computational and Systems Biology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United StatesDepartment of Computational and Systems Biology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United StatesMany eukaryotic regulatory proteins adopt distinct bound and unbound conformations, and use this structural flexibility to bind specifically to multiple partners. However, we lack an understanding of how an interface can select some ligands, but not others. Here, we present a molecular dynamics approach to identify and quantitatively evaluate the interactions responsible for this selective promiscuity. We apply this approach to the anticancer target PD-1 and its ligands PD-L1 and PD-L2. We discover that while unbound PD-1 exhibits a hard-to-drug hydrophilic interface, conserved specific triggers encoded in the cognate ligands activate a promiscuous binding pathway that reveals a flexible hydrophobic binding cavity. Specificity is then established by additional contacts that stabilize the PD-1 cavity into distinct bound-like modes. Collectively, our studies provide insight into the structural basis and evolution of multiple binding partners, and also suggest a biophysical approach to exploit innate binding pathways to drug seemingly undruggable targets.https://elifesciences.org/articles/22889PD-1induced fitspecificitypromiscuityflexibilityanchor residue
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicolas A Pabon
Carlos J Camacho
spellingShingle Nicolas A Pabon
Carlos J Camacho
Probing protein flexibility reveals a mechanism for selective promiscuity
eLife
PD-1
induced fit
specificity
promiscuity
flexibility
anchor residue
author_facet Nicolas A Pabon
Carlos J Camacho
author_sort Nicolas A Pabon
title Probing protein flexibility reveals a mechanism for selective promiscuity
title_short Probing protein flexibility reveals a mechanism for selective promiscuity
title_full Probing protein flexibility reveals a mechanism for selective promiscuity
title_fullStr Probing protein flexibility reveals a mechanism for selective promiscuity
title_full_unstemmed Probing protein flexibility reveals a mechanism for selective promiscuity
title_sort probing protein flexibility reveals a mechanism for selective promiscuity
publisher eLife Sciences Publications Ltd
series eLife
issn 2050-084X
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Many eukaryotic regulatory proteins adopt distinct bound and unbound conformations, and use this structural flexibility to bind specifically to multiple partners. However, we lack an understanding of how an interface can select some ligands, but not others. Here, we present a molecular dynamics approach to identify and quantitatively evaluate the interactions responsible for this selective promiscuity. We apply this approach to the anticancer target PD-1 and its ligands PD-L1 and PD-L2. We discover that while unbound PD-1 exhibits a hard-to-drug hydrophilic interface, conserved specific triggers encoded in the cognate ligands activate a promiscuous binding pathway that reveals a flexible hydrophobic binding cavity. Specificity is then established by additional contacts that stabilize the PD-1 cavity into distinct bound-like modes. Collectively, our studies provide insight into the structural basis and evolution of multiple binding partners, and also suggest a biophysical approach to exploit innate binding pathways to drug seemingly undruggable targets.
topic PD-1
induced fit
specificity
promiscuity
flexibility
anchor residue
url https://elifesciences.org/articles/22889
work_keys_str_mv AT nicolasapabon probingproteinflexibilityrevealsamechanismforselectivepromiscuity
AT carlosjcamacho probingproteinflexibilityrevealsamechanismforselectivepromiscuity
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