Objectives
Docking-based tools for discovery of protein-protein modulators.
Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) play an essential role in the majority of cell processes, and their dysregulation, caused either by environment factors or genetic variations, are origin of many pathological conditions. Strategies to modulate PPIs with small molecules have therefore attracted increasing interest over the last years. However, the quest for new PPI inhibitors has major difficulties, such as the usually large size of protein-protein interfaces or the absence of preformed cavities in them. These problems are especially challenging when no 3D structure is available for the protein-protein complex. By using docking simulations with pyDock, it is possible to identify protein-protein hot-spot residues, which can help to localize possible small-molecule binding sites without any prior structural knowledge of the complex. Then, molecular dynamics (MD) can be used to describe fluctuations on the interacting surfaces, in order to search for transient cavities with Fpocket. We evaluated this approach on a small set of protein-protein complexes with known small-molecule inhibitors, in which structural data are available for the unbound molecules, as well as for the protein-protein and protein-inhibitor complexes. We found that MD simulations are essential to find small cavities that are similar to the inhibitor binding sites. The predicted hot-spot residues helped to identify the known inhibitor binding sites. We will discuss how these predicted cavities can play an interesting point for the chemical perturbation of PPIs through small-molecules.
Short b
Jelisa Iglesias is a PhD student in her last year at the EAPM group in the Life Science department at the BSC. She obtained her MsC in Bioinformatics by the UAB in 2014 and her Biotechnology degree by the UB at 2013.