Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two major types of cleavage sites with different sequence preferences have been proposed for the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) proteinase. To understand the nature of these sequence preferences better, single and multiple amino acid substitutions were introduced into a type 1 cleavage site peptide, thus changing it to a naturally occurring type 2 cleavage site sequence. Our results indicated that the previous classification of the retroviral cleavage sites may not be generally valid and that the preference for a residue at a particular position in the substrate depends strongly on the neighboring residues, including both those at the same side and at the opposite side of the peptide backbone of the substrate. Based on these results, pseudosymmetric (palindromic) substrates were designed. The retroviral proteinases are symmetrical dimers of two identical subunits; however, the residues of naturally occurring cleavage sites do not show symmetrical arrangements, and no obvious symmetrical substrate preference has been observed for the specificity of HIV proteinase. To examine the role of the asymmetry created by the peptide bonds on the specificity of the respective primed and nonprimed halves of the binding site, amino acid substitutions were introduced into a palindromic sequence. In general, the results suggested that the asymmetry does not result in substantial differences in specificity of the S3 and S3' subsites, whereas its effect is more pronounced for the S2 and S2' subsites. Although it was possible to design several good palindromic substrates, asymmetrical arrangements may be preferred by the HIV proteinase.
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PMID:Studies on the symmetry and sequence context dependence of the HIV-1 proteinase specificity. 920 86

The active site of aspartic proteases is covered by one or more flaps, which control access to the active site and play a significant role in the binding of the substrate. An extensive conformational change of the flaps takes place upon binding of substrate to the active site. A long molecular dynamics simulation was performed on the complex consisting of a peptide (CA-p2) from a natural substrate cleavage site of the gag/pol polyprotein placed in the active site of HIV-1 protease (PR) with an open flap conformation. During the simulation, the substrate induced the closing of the flaps into the closed conformation in an asymmetrical way through a hydrophobic intermediate state cluster. The nature of the residues of HIV-1 PR identified to be important in the flap closing mechanism is conserved across known structures of retroviral aspartic proteases family. The flap closing mechanism described in HIV-1 PR is proposed to be a general model for flap closing in retroviral aspartic proteases.
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PMID:Closing of the flaps of HIV-1 protease induced by substrate binding: a model of a flap closing mechanism in retroviral aspartic proteases. 1671 71

HIV-1 protease (HIVPR) is an important drug target for combating AIDS. This enzyme is an aspartyl protease that is functionally active in its dimeric form. Nuclear magnetic resonance reports have convincingly shown that a pseudosymmetry exists at the HIVPR active site, where only one of the two aspartates remains protonated over the pH range of 2.5-7.0. To date, all HIVPR-targeted drug design strategies focused on maximizing the size-shape complementarity and van der Waals interactions of the small molecule drugs with the deprotonated, symmetric active site envelope of crystallized HIVPR. However, these strategies were ineffective with the emergence of drug resistant protease variants, primarily due to the steric clashes at the active site. In this study, we traced a specificity in the substrate binding motif that emerges primarily from the asymmetrical electrostatic potential present in the protease active site due to the uneven protonation. Our detailed results from atomistic molecular dynamics simulations show that while such a specific mode of substrate binding involves significant electrostatic interactions, none of the existing drugs or inhibitors could utilize this electrostatic hot spot. As the electrostatic is long-range interaction, it can provide sufficient binding strength without the necessity of increasing the bulkiness of the inhibitors. We propose that introducing the electrostatic component along with optimal fitting at the binding pocket could pave the way for promising designs that might be more effective against both wild type and HIVPR resistant variants.
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PMID:Electrostatics Plays a Crucial Role in HIV-1 Protease Substrate Binding, Drugs Fail to Take Advantage. 3282 54