Ligand configurational entropy and protein binding

CA Chang, W Chen, MK Gilson - Proceedings of the …, 2007 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007National Acad Sciences
The restriction of a small molecule's motion on binding to a protein causes a loss of
configurational entropy, and thus a penalty in binding affinity. Some energy models used in
computer-aided ligand design neglect this entropic penalty, whereas others account for it
based on an expected drop in the number of accessible rotamers upon binding. However,
the validity of the physical assumptions underlying the various approaches is largely
unexamined. The present study addresses this issue by using Mining Minima calculations to …
The restriction of a small molecule's motion on binding to a protein causes a loss of configurational entropy, and thus a penalty in binding affinity. Some energy models used in computer-aided ligand design neglect this entropic penalty, whereas others account for it based on an expected drop in the number of accessible rotamers upon binding. However, the validity of the physical assumptions underlying the various approaches is largely unexamined. The present study addresses this issue by using Mining Minima calculations to analyze the association of amprenavir with HIV protease. The computed loss in ligand configurational entropy is large, contributing ∼25 kcal/mol (4.184 kJ/kcal) to ΔG°. Most of this loss results from narrower energy wells in the bound state, rather than a drop in the number of accessible rotamers. Coupling among rotation/translation and internal degrees of freedom complicates the decomposition of the entropy change into additive terms. The results highlight the potential to gain affinity by designing conformationally restricted ligands and have implications for the formulation of energy models for ligand scoring.
National Acad Sciences
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