Identification of novel compounds against Plasmodium falciparum Cytochrome bc1 Complex inhibiting the trans-membrane electron transfer pathway: an In Silico study
- Authors: Chebon, Lorna Jemosop
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Malaria , Plasmodium falciparum , Molecular dynamics , Antimalarials , Molecules Models , Docking , Cytochromes , Drug resistance , Computer simulation , Drugs Computer-aided design , System analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/365666 , vital:65774 , DOI https://doi.org/10.21504/10962/365666
- Description: Malaria continues to be a burden globally with a myriad of challenges deterring eradication efforts. With most antimalarials facing drug resistance, such as atovaquone (ATQ), alternative compounds that can withstand resistance are warranted. The Plasmodium falciparum cytochrome b (PfCytb), a subunit of P. falciparum cytochrome bc1 complex, is a validated drug target. Structurally, cytochrome b, cytochrome c1, and iron sulphur protein (ISP) subunits form the catalytic domain of the protein complex having heme bL, heme bH and iron-sulphur [2FE-2S] cluster cofactors. These cofactos have redox centres to aid in the electron transfer (ET) process. These subunits promote ET mainly through the enzyme’s ubiquinol oxidation (Qo) and ubiquinone reduction (Qi) processes in the catalytic domain. ATQ drug has been used in the prevention and treatment of uncomplicated malaria by targeting PfCytb protein. Once the mitochondrial transmembrane ET pathway is inhibited, it causes a collapse in its membrane potential. Previously reported ATQ drug resistance has been associated with the point mutations Y268C, Y268N and Y268S. Thus, in finding alternatives to the ATQ drug, this research aimed to: i) employ in silico approaches incorporating protein into phospholipid bilayer for the first time to understand the parasites’ resistance mechanism; ii) determine any sequence and structural differences that could be explored in drug design studies; and iii) screen for PfCytb-iron sulphur protein (Cytb-ISP) hit compounds from South African natural compound database (SANCDB) and Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) that can withstand the identified mutations. Using computational tools, comparative sequence and structural analyses were performed on the cytochrome b protein, where the ultimate focus was on P. falciparum cytochrome b and its human homolog. Through multiple sequence alignment, motif discovery and phylogeny, differences between P. falciparum and H. sapiens cytochrome b were identified. Protein modelling of both P. falciparum and H. sapiens cytochrome b - iron sulphur protein (PfCytb-ISP and HsCytb-ISP) was performed. Results showed that at the sequence level, there were few amino acid residue differences because the protein is highly conserved. Important to note is the four-residue deletion in Plasmodium spp. absent in the human homolog. Motif analysis discovered five unique motifs in P. falciparum cytochrome b protein which were mapped onto the predicted protein model. These motifs were not in regions of functional importance; hence their function is still unknown. At a structural level, the four-residue deletion was observed to alter the Qo substrate binding pocket as reported in previous studies and confirmed in this study. This deletion resulted in a 0.83 Å structural displacement. Also, there are currently no in silico studies that have performed experiments with P. falciparum cytochrome b protein incorporated into a phospholipid bilayer. Using 350 ns molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the holo and ATQ-bound systems, the study highlighted the resistance mechanism of the parasite protein where the loss of active site residue-residue interactions was identified, all linked to the three mutations. The identified compromised interactions are likely to destabilise the protein’s function, specifically in the Qo substrate binding site. This showed the possible effect of mutations on ATQ drug activity, where all three mutations were reported to share a similar resistance mechanism. Thereafter, this research work utilised in silico approaches where both Qo active site and interface pocket were targeted by screening the South African natural compounds database (SANCDB) and Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) compounds to identify novel selective hits. SANCDB compounds are known for their structural complexity that preserves the potency of the drug molecule. Both SANCDB and MMV compounds have not been explored as inhibitors against the PfCytb drug target. Molecular docking, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, principal component, and dynamic residue network (DRN; global and local) analyses were utilised to identify and confirm the potential selective inhibitors. Docking results identified compounds that bound selectively onto PfCytb-ISP with a binding energy ≤ -8.7 kcal/mol-1. Further, this work validated a total of eight potential selective compounds to inhibit PfCytb-ISP protein (Qo active site) not only in the wild-type but also in the presence of the point mutations Y268C, Y268N and Y268S. The selective binding of these hit compounds could be linked to the differences reported at sequence/residue level in chapter 3. DRN and residue contact map analyses of the eight compounds in holo and ligand-bound systems revealed reduced residue interactions and decreased protein communication. This suggests that the eight compounds show the possibility of inhibiting the parasite and disrupting important residue-residue interactions. Additionally, 13 selective compounds were identified to bind at the protein’s heterodimer interface, where global and local analysis confirmed their effect on active site residues (distal location) as well as on the communication network. Based on the sequence differences between PfCytb and the human homolog, these findings suggest these selective compounds as potential allosteric modulators of the parasite enzyme, which may serve as possible replacements of the already resistant ATQ drug. Therefore, these findings pave the way for further in vitro studies to establish their anti-plasmodial inhibition levels. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Authors: Chebon, Lorna Jemosop
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Malaria , Plasmodium falciparum , Molecular dynamics , Antimalarials , Molecules Models , Docking , Cytochromes , Drug resistance , Computer simulation , Drugs Computer-aided design , System analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/365666 , vital:65774 , DOI https://doi.org/10.21504/10962/365666
- Description: Malaria continues to be a burden globally with a myriad of challenges deterring eradication efforts. With most antimalarials facing drug resistance, such as atovaquone (ATQ), alternative compounds that can withstand resistance are warranted. The Plasmodium falciparum cytochrome b (PfCytb), a subunit of P. falciparum cytochrome bc1 complex, is a validated drug target. Structurally, cytochrome b, cytochrome c1, and iron sulphur protein (ISP) subunits form the catalytic domain of the protein complex having heme bL, heme bH and iron-sulphur [2FE-2S] cluster cofactors. These cofactos have redox centres to aid in the electron transfer (ET) process. These subunits promote ET mainly through the enzyme’s ubiquinol oxidation (Qo) and ubiquinone reduction (Qi) processes in the catalytic domain. ATQ drug has been used in the prevention and treatment of uncomplicated malaria by targeting PfCytb protein. Once the mitochondrial transmembrane ET pathway is inhibited, it causes a collapse in its membrane potential. Previously reported ATQ drug resistance has been associated with the point mutations Y268C, Y268N and Y268S. Thus, in finding alternatives to the ATQ drug, this research aimed to: i) employ in silico approaches incorporating protein into phospholipid bilayer for the first time to understand the parasites’ resistance mechanism; ii) determine any sequence and structural differences that could be explored in drug design studies; and iii) screen for PfCytb-iron sulphur protein (Cytb-ISP) hit compounds from South African natural compound database (SANCDB) and Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) that can withstand the identified mutations. Using computational tools, comparative sequence and structural analyses were performed on the cytochrome b protein, where the ultimate focus was on P. falciparum cytochrome b and its human homolog. Through multiple sequence alignment, motif discovery and phylogeny, differences between P. falciparum and H. sapiens cytochrome b were identified. Protein modelling of both P. falciparum and H. sapiens cytochrome b - iron sulphur protein (PfCytb-ISP and HsCytb-ISP) was performed. Results showed that at the sequence level, there were few amino acid residue differences because the protein is highly conserved. Important to note is the four-residue deletion in Plasmodium spp. absent in the human homolog. Motif analysis discovered five unique motifs in P. falciparum cytochrome b protein which were mapped onto the predicted protein model. These motifs were not in regions of functional importance; hence their function is still unknown. At a structural level, the four-residue deletion was observed to alter the Qo substrate binding pocket as reported in previous studies and confirmed in this study. This deletion resulted in a 0.83 Å structural displacement. Also, there are currently no in silico studies that have performed experiments with P. falciparum cytochrome b protein incorporated into a phospholipid bilayer. Using 350 ns molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the holo and ATQ-bound systems, the study highlighted the resistance mechanism of the parasite protein where the loss of active site residue-residue interactions was identified, all linked to the three mutations. The identified compromised interactions are likely to destabilise the protein’s function, specifically in the Qo substrate binding site. This showed the possible effect of mutations on ATQ drug activity, where all three mutations were reported to share a similar resistance mechanism. Thereafter, this research work utilised in silico approaches where both Qo active site and interface pocket were targeted by screening the South African natural compounds database (SANCDB) and Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) compounds to identify novel selective hits. SANCDB compounds are known for their structural complexity that preserves the potency of the drug molecule. Both SANCDB and MMV compounds have not been explored as inhibitors against the PfCytb drug target. Molecular docking, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, principal component, and dynamic residue network (DRN; global and local) analyses were utilised to identify and confirm the potential selective inhibitors. Docking results identified compounds that bound selectively onto PfCytb-ISP with a binding energy ≤ -8.7 kcal/mol-1. Further, this work validated a total of eight potential selective compounds to inhibit PfCytb-ISP protein (Qo active site) not only in the wild-type but also in the presence of the point mutations Y268C, Y268N and Y268S. The selective binding of these hit compounds could be linked to the differences reported at sequence/residue level in chapter 3. DRN and residue contact map analyses of the eight compounds in holo and ligand-bound systems revealed reduced residue interactions and decreased protein communication. This suggests that the eight compounds show the possibility of inhibiting the parasite and disrupting important residue-residue interactions. Additionally, 13 selective compounds were identified to bind at the protein’s heterodimer interface, where global and local analysis confirmed their effect on active site residues (distal location) as well as on the communication network. Based on the sequence differences between PfCytb and the human homolog, these findings suggest these selective compounds as potential allosteric modulators of the parasite enzyme, which may serve as possible replacements of the already resistant ATQ drug. Therefore, these findings pave the way for further in vitro studies to establish their anti-plasmodial inhibition levels. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2022
- Full Text:
Sequence, structure, dynamics, and substrate specificity analyses of bacterial Glycoside Hydrolase 1 enzymes from several activities
- Authors: Veldman, Wayde Michael
- Date: 2022-04-08
- Subjects: Glycosidases , Bioinformatics , Molecular dynamics , Ligands (Biochemistry) , Enzymes , Ligand binding (Biochemistry) , Sequence alignment (Bioinformatics) , Structural bioinformatics
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/233805 , vital:50129 , DOI 10.21504/10962/233810
- Description: Glycoside hydrolase 1 (GH1) enzymes are a ubiquitous family of enzymes that hydrolyse the glycosidic bond between two or more carbohydrates, or between a carbohydrate and a non-carbohydrate moiety. Despite their conserved catalytic domain, these enzymes have many different enzyme activities and/or substrate specificities as a change of only a few residues in the active site can alter their function. Most GH1 active site residues are situated in loop regions, and it is known that enzymes are more likely to develop new functions (broad specificity) if they possess an active site with a high proportion of loops. Furthermore, the GH1 active site consists of several subsites and cooperative binding makes the binding affinity of sites difficult to measure because the properties of one subsite are influenced by the binding of the other subsites. Extensive knowledge of protein-ligand interactions is critical to the comprehension of biology at the molecular level. However, the structural determinants and molecular details of GH1 ligand specificity and affinity are very broad, highly complex, not well understood, and therefore still need to be clarified. The aim of this study was to computationally characterise the activity of three newly solved GH1 crystallographic structures sent to us by our collaborators, and to provide evidence for their ligand-binding specificities. In addition, the differences in structural and biochemical contributions to enzyme specificity and/or function between different GH1 activities/enzymes was assessed, and the sequence/structure/function relationship of several activities of GH1 enzymes was analysed and compared. To accomplish the research aims, sequence analyses involving sequence identity, phylogenetics, and motif discovery were performed. As protein structure is more conserved than sequence, the discovered motifs were mapped to 3D structures for structural analysis and comparisons. To obtain information on enzyme mechanism or mode of action, as well as structure-function relationship, computational methods such as docking, molecular dynamics, binding free energy calculations, and essential dynamics were implemented. These computational approaches can provide information on the active site, binding residues, protein-ligand interactions, binding affinity, conformational change, and most structural or dynamic elements that play a role in enzyme function. The three new structures received from our collaborators are the first GH1 crystallographic structures from Bacillus licheniformis ever determined. As phospho-glycoside compounds were unavailable for purchase for use in activity assays, and as the active sites of the structures were absent of ligand, in silico docking and MD simulations were performed to provide evidence for their GH1 activities and substrate specificities. First though, the amino acid sequences of all known characterised bacterial GH1 enzymes were retrieved from the CAZy database and compared to the sequences of the three new B. licheniformis crystallographic structures which provided evidence of the putative 6Pβ-glucosidase activity of enzyme BlBglH, and dual 6Pβ-glucosidase/6Pβ-galactosidase (dual-phospho) activity of enzymes BlBglB and BlBglC. As all three enzymes were determined to be putative 6Pβ-glycosidase activity enzymes, much of the thesis focused on the overall analysis and comparison of the 6Pβ-glucosidase, 6Pβ-galactosidase, and dual-phospho activities that make up the 6Pβ-glycosidases. The 6Pβ-glycosidase active site residues were identified through consensus of binding interactions using all known 6Pβ-glycosidase PDB structures complexed complete ligand substrates. With regards to the 6Pβ-glucosidase activity, it was found that the L8b loop is longer and forms extra interactions with the L8a loop likely leading to increased L8 loop rigidity which would prevent the displacement of residue Ala423 ensuring a steric clash with galactoconfigured ligands and may engender substrate specificity for gluco-configured ligands only. Also, during molecular dynamics simulations using enzyme BlBglH (6Pβ-glucosidase activity), it was revealed that the favourable binding of substrate stabilises the loops that surround and make up the enzyme active site. Using the BlBglC (dual-phospho activity) enzyme structure with either galacto- (PNP6Pgal) or gluco-configured (PNP6Pglc) ligands, MD simulations in triplicate revealed important details of the broad specificity of dual-phospho activity enzymes. The ligand O4 hydroxyl position is the only difference between PNP6Pgal and PNP6Pgal, and it was found that residues Gln23 and Trp433 bind strongly to the ligand O3 hydroxyl group in the PNP6Pgal-enzyme complex, but to the ligand O4 hydroxyl group in the PNP6Pglc-enzyme complex. Also, His124 formed many hydrogen bonds with the PNP6Pgal O3 hydroxyl group but had none with PNP6Pglc. Alternatively, residues Tyr173, Tyr301, Gln302 and Thr321 formed hydrogen bonds with PNP6Pglc but not PNP6Pgal. Lastly, using multiple 3D structures from various GH1 activities, a large network of conserved interactions between active site residues (and other important residues) was uncovered, which most likely stabilise the loop regions that contain these residues, helping to retain their positions needed for binding molecules. Alternatively, there exists several differing residue-residue interactions when comparing each of the activities which could contribute towards individual activity substrate specificity by causing slightly different overall structure and malleability of the active site. Altogether, the findings in this thesis shed light on the function, mechanisms, dynamics, and ligand-binding of GH1 enzymes – particularly of the 6Pβ-glycosidase activities. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Authors: Veldman, Wayde Michael
- Date: 2022-04-08
- Subjects: Glycosidases , Bioinformatics , Molecular dynamics , Ligands (Biochemistry) , Enzymes , Ligand binding (Biochemistry) , Sequence alignment (Bioinformatics) , Structural bioinformatics
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/233805 , vital:50129 , DOI 10.21504/10962/233810
- Description: Glycoside hydrolase 1 (GH1) enzymes are a ubiquitous family of enzymes that hydrolyse the glycosidic bond between two or more carbohydrates, or between a carbohydrate and a non-carbohydrate moiety. Despite their conserved catalytic domain, these enzymes have many different enzyme activities and/or substrate specificities as a change of only a few residues in the active site can alter their function. Most GH1 active site residues are situated in loop regions, and it is known that enzymes are more likely to develop new functions (broad specificity) if they possess an active site with a high proportion of loops. Furthermore, the GH1 active site consists of several subsites and cooperative binding makes the binding affinity of sites difficult to measure because the properties of one subsite are influenced by the binding of the other subsites. Extensive knowledge of protein-ligand interactions is critical to the comprehension of biology at the molecular level. However, the structural determinants and molecular details of GH1 ligand specificity and affinity are very broad, highly complex, not well understood, and therefore still need to be clarified. The aim of this study was to computationally characterise the activity of three newly solved GH1 crystallographic structures sent to us by our collaborators, and to provide evidence for their ligand-binding specificities. In addition, the differences in structural and biochemical contributions to enzyme specificity and/or function between different GH1 activities/enzymes was assessed, and the sequence/structure/function relationship of several activities of GH1 enzymes was analysed and compared. To accomplish the research aims, sequence analyses involving sequence identity, phylogenetics, and motif discovery were performed. As protein structure is more conserved than sequence, the discovered motifs were mapped to 3D structures for structural analysis and comparisons. To obtain information on enzyme mechanism or mode of action, as well as structure-function relationship, computational methods such as docking, molecular dynamics, binding free energy calculations, and essential dynamics were implemented. These computational approaches can provide information on the active site, binding residues, protein-ligand interactions, binding affinity, conformational change, and most structural or dynamic elements that play a role in enzyme function. The three new structures received from our collaborators are the first GH1 crystallographic structures from Bacillus licheniformis ever determined. As phospho-glycoside compounds were unavailable for purchase for use in activity assays, and as the active sites of the structures were absent of ligand, in silico docking and MD simulations were performed to provide evidence for their GH1 activities and substrate specificities. First though, the amino acid sequences of all known characterised bacterial GH1 enzymes were retrieved from the CAZy database and compared to the sequences of the three new B. licheniformis crystallographic structures which provided evidence of the putative 6Pβ-glucosidase activity of enzyme BlBglH, and dual 6Pβ-glucosidase/6Pβ-galactosidase (dual-phospho) activity of enzymes BlBglB and BlBglC. As all three enzymes were determined to be putative 6Pβ-glycosidase activity enzymes, much of the thesis focused on the overall analysis and comparison of the 6Pβ-glucosidase, 6Pβ-galactosidase, and dual-phospho activities that make up the 6Pβ-glycosidases. The 6Pβ-glycosidase active site residues were identified through consensus of binding interactions using all known 6Pβ-glycosidase PDB structures complexed complete ligand substrates. With regards to the 6Pβ-glucosidase activity, it was found that the L8b loop is longer and forms extra interactions with the L8a loop likely leading to increased L8 loop rigidity which would prevent the displacement of residue Ala423 ensuring a steric clash with galactoconfigured ligands and may engender substrate specificity for gluco-configured ligands only. Also, during molecular dynamics simulations using enzyme BlBglH (6Pβ-glucosidase activity), it was revealed that the favourable binding of substrate stabilises the loops that surround and make up the enzyme active site. Using the BlBglC (dual-phospho activity) enzyme structure with either galacto- (PNP6Pgal) or gluco-configured (PNP6Pglc) ligands, MD simulations in triplicate revealed important details of the broad specificity of dual-phospho activity enzymes. The ligand O4 hydroxyl position is the only difference between PNP6Pgal and PNP6Pgal, and it was found that residues Gln23 and Trp433 bind strongly to the ligand O3 hydroxyl group in the PNP6Pgal-enzyme complex, but to the ligand O4 hydroxyl group in the PNP6Pglc-enzyme complex. Also, His124 formed many hydrogen bonds with the PNP6Pgal O3 hydroxyl group but had none with PNP6Pglc. Alternatively, residues Tyr173, Tyr301, Gln302 and Thr321 formed hydrogen bonds with PNP6Pglc but not PNP6Pgal. Lastly, using multiple 3D structures from various GH1 activities, a large network of conserved interactions between active site residues (and other important residues) was uncovered, which most likely stabilise the loop regions that contain these residues, helping to retain their positions needed for binding molecules. Alternatively, there exists several differing residue-residue interactions when comparing each of the activities which could contribute towards individual activity substrate specificity by causing slightly different overall structure and malleability of the active site. Altogether, the findings in this thesis shed light on the function, mechanisms, dynamics, and ligand-binding of GH1 enzymes – particularly of the 6Pβ-glycosidase activities. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2022
- Full Text:
The characterization of GTP Cyclohydrolase I and 6-Pyruvoyl Tetrahydropterin Synthase enzymes as potential anti-malarial drug targets
- Khairallah, Afrah Yousif Huseein
- Authors: Khairallah, Afrah Yousif Huseein
- Date: 2022-04-08
- Subjects: Antimalarials , Plasmodium falciparum , Malaria Chemotherapy , Malaria Africa , Drug resistance , Drug development , Molecular dynamics
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/233784 , vital:50127 , DOI 10.21504/10962/233784
- Description: Malaria remains a public health problem and a high burden of disease, especially in developing countries. The unicellular protozoan malaria parasite of the genus Plasmodium infects about a quarter of a billion people annually, with an estimated 409 000 death cases. The majority of malaria cases occurred in Africa; hence, the region is regarded as endemic for malaria. Global efforts to eradicate the disease led to a decrease in morbidity and mortality rates. However, an enormous burden of malaria infection remains, and it cannot go unnoticed. Countries with limited resources are more affected by the disease, mainly on its public health and socio-economic development, due to many factors besides malaria itself, such as lack of access to adequate, affordable treatments and preventative regimes. Furthermore, the current antimalarial drugs are losing their efficacy because of parasite drug resistance. The emerged drug resistance has reduced the drug efficacy in clearing the parasite from the host system, causing prolonged illness and a higher risk of death. Therefore, the emerged antimalarial drug resistance has hindered the global efforts for malaria control and elimination and established an urgent need for new treatment strategies. When the resistance against classical antimalarial drugs emerged, the class of antifolate antimalarial medicines became the most common alternative. The antifolate antimalarial drugs target the malaria parasite de novo folate biosynthesis pathway by limiting folate derivates, which are essential for the parasite cell growth and survival. Yet again, the malaria parasite developed resistance against the available antifolate drugs, rendering the drugs ineffective in many cases. Given the previous success in targeting the malaria parasite de novo folate biosynthesis pathway, alternative enzymes within this pathway stand as good targets and can be explored to develop new antifolate drugs with novel mechanisms of action. The primary focus of this thesis is to contribute to the existing and growing knowledge of antimalarial drug discovery. The study aims to characterise the malaria parasite de novo folate synthesis pathway enzymes guanosine-5'-triphosphate (GTP) cyclohydrolase I (GCH1) and 6-pyruvoyl tetrahydropterin synthase (PTPS) as alternative drug targets for malaria treatment by using computational approaches. Further, discover new allosteric drug targeting sites within the two enzymes' 3D structures for future drug design and discovery. Sequence and structural analysis were carried out to characterise and pinpoint the two enzymes' unique sequence and structure-based features. From the analyses, key sequence and structure differences were identified between the malaria parasite enzymes relative to their human homolog; the identified sites can aid significantly in designing and developing new antimalarial antifolate drugs with good selectivity toward the parasites’ enzymes. GCH1 and PTPS contain a catalytically essential metal ion in their active site; therefore, force field parameters were needed to study their active sites accurately during all-atom molecular dynamic simulations (MD). The force field parameters were derived through quantum mechanics potential energy surface scans of the metals bonded terms and evaluated via all-atom MD simulations. Proteins structural dynamics is imperative for many biological processes; thus, it is essential to consider the structural dynamics of proteins whilst understanding their function. In this regard, the normal mode analysis (NMA) approach based on the elastic network model (ENM) was employed to study the intrinsic dynamics and conformations changes of GCH1 and PTPS enzymes. The NMA disclosed essential structural information about the protein’s intrinsic dynamics and mechanism of allosteric modulation of their binding properties, further highlighting regions that govern their conformational changes. The analysis also disclosed hotspot residues that are crucial for the proteins' fold stability and function. The NMA was further combined with sequence motif results and showed that conserved residues of GCH1 and PTPS were located within the identified key structural sites modulating the proteins' conformational rearrangement. The characterized structural features and hotspot residues were regarded as potential allosteric sites of important value for the design and development of allosteric drugs. Both GCH1 and PTPS enzymes have never been targeted before and can provide an excellent opportunity to overcome the antimalarial antifolate drug resistance problem. The data presented in this thesis contribute to the understanding of the sequence, structure, and global dynamics of both GCH1 and PTPS, further disclose potential allosteric drug targeting sites and unique structural features of both enzymes that can establish a solid starting point for drug design and development of new antimalarial drugs of a novel mechanism of actions. Lastly, the reported force field parameters will be of value for MD simulations for future in-silico drug discovery studies involving the two enzymes and other enzymes with the same Zn2+ binding motifs and coordination environments. The impact of this research can facilitate the discovery of new effective antimalarial medicines with novel mechanisms of action. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Authors: Khairallah, Afrah Yousif Huseein
- Date: 2022-04-08
- Subjects: Antimalarials , Plasmodium falciparum , Malaria Chemotherapy , Malaria Africa , Drug resistance , Drug development , Molecular dynamics
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral thesis , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/233784 , vital:50127 , DOI 10.21504/10962/233784
- Description: Malaria remains a public health problem and a high burden of disease, especially in developing countries. The unicellular protozoan malaria parasite of the genus Plasmodium infects about a quarter of a billion people annually, with an estimated 409 000 death cases. The majority of malaria cases occurred in Africa; hence, the region is regarded as endemic for malaria. Global efforts to eradicate the disease led to a decrease in morbidity and mortality rates. However, an enormous burden of malaria infection remains, and it cannot go unnoticed. Countries with limited resources are more affected by the disease, mainly on its public health and socio-economic development, due to many factors besides malaria itself, such as lack of access to adequate, affordable treatments and preventative regimes. Furthermore, the current antimalarial drugs are losing their efficacy because of parasite drug resistance. The emerged drug resistance has reduced the drug efficacy in clearing the parasite from the host system, causing prolonged illness and a higher risk of death. Therefore, the emerged antimalarial drug resistance has hindered the global efforts for malaria control and elimination and established an urgent need for new treatment strategies. When the resistance against classical antimalarial drugs emerged, the class of antifolate antimalarial medicines became the most common alternative. The antifolate antimalarial drugs target the malaria parasite de novo folate biosynthesis pathway by limiting folate derivates, which are essential for the parasite cell growth and survival. Yet again, the malaria parasite developed resistance against the available antifolate drugs, rendering the drugs ineffective in many cases. Given the previous success in targeting the malaria parasite de novo folate biosynthesis pathway, alternative enzymes within this pathway stand as good targets and can be explored to develop new antifolate drugs with novel mechanisms of action. The primary focus of this thesis is to contribute to the existing and growing knowledge of antimalarial drug discovery. The study aims to characterise the malaria parasite de novo folate synthesis pathway enzymes guanosine-5'-triphosphate (GTP) cyclohydrolase I (GCH1) and 6-pyruvoyl tetrahydropterin synthase (PTPS) as alternative drug targets for malaria treatment by using computational approaches. Further, discover new allosteric drug targeting sites within the two enzymes' 3D structures for future drug design and discovery. Sequence and structural analysis were carried out to characterise and pinpoint the two enzymes' unique sequence and structure-based features. From the analyses, key sequence and structure differences were identified between the malaria parasite enzymes relative to their human homolog; the identified sites can aid significantly in designing and developing new antimalarial antifolate drugs with good selectivity toward the parasites’ enzymes. GCH1 and PTPS contain a catalytically essential metal ion in their active site; therefore, force field parameters were needed to study their active sites accurately during all-atom molecular dynamic simulations (MD). The force field parameters were derived through quantum mechanics potential energy surface scans of the metals bonded terms and evaluated via all-atom MD simulations. Proteins structural dynamics is imperative for many biological processes; thus, it is essential to consider the structural dynamics of proteins whilst understanding their function. In this regard, the normal mode analysis (NMA) approach based on the elastic network model (ENM) was employed to study the intrinsic dynamics and conformations changes of GCH1 and PTPS enzymes. The NMA disclosed essential structural information about the protein’s intrinsic dynamics and mechanism of allosteric modulation of their binding properties, further highlighting regions that govern their conformational changes. The analysis also disclosed hotspot residues that are crucial for the proteins' fold stability and function. The NMA was further combined with sequence motif results and showed that conserved residues of GCH1 and PTPS were located within the identified key structural sites modulating the proteins' conformational rearrangement. The characterized structural features and hotspot residues were regarded as potential allosteric sites of important value for the design and development of allosteric drugs. Both GCH1 and PTPS enzymes have never been targeted before and can provide an excellent opportunity to overcome the antimalarial antifolate drug resistance problem. The data presented in this thesis contribute to the understanding of the sequence, structure, and global dynamics of both GCH1 and PTPS, further disclose potential allosteric drug targeting sites and unique structural features of both enzymes that can establish a solid starting point for drug design and development of new antimalarial drugs of a novel mechanism of actions. Lastly, the reported force field parameters will be of value for MD simulations for future in-silico drug discovery studies involving the two enzymes and other enzymes with the same Zn2+ binding motifs and coordination environments. The impact of this research can facilitate the discovery of new effective antimalarial medicines with novel mechanisms of action. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2022
- Full Text:
Application of computer-aided drug design for identification of P. falciparum inhibitors
- Authors: Diallo, Bakary N’tji
- Date: 2021-10-29
- Subjects: Plasmodium falciparum , Malaria -- Chemotherapy , Molecular dynamics , Antimalarials , Cheminformatics , Drug development , Ligand binding (Biochemistry) , Plasmodium falciparum1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate reductoisomerase (PfDXR) , South African Natural Compounds Database
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/192798 , vital:45265 , 10.21504/10962/192798
- Description: Malaria is a millennia-old disease with the first recorded cases dating back to 2700 BC found in Chinese medical records, and later in other civilizations. It has claimed human lives to such an extent that there are a notable associated socio-economic consequences. Currently, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), Africa holds the highest disease burden with 94% of deaths and 82% of cases with P. falciparum having ~100% prevalence. Chemotherapy, such as artemisinin combination therapy, has been and continues to be the work horse in the fight against the disease, together with seasonal malaria chemoprevention and the use of insecticides. Natural products such as quinine and artemisinin are particularly important in terms of their antimalarial activity. The emphasis in current chemotherapy research is the need for time and cost-effective workflows focussed on new mechanisms of action (MoAs) covering the target candidate profiles (TCPs). Despite a decline in cases over the past decades with, countries increasingly becoming certified malaria free, a stalling trend has been observed in the past five years resulting in missing the 2020 Global Technical Strategy (GTS) milestones. With no effective vaccine, a reduction in funding, slower drug approval than resistance emergence from resistant and invasive vectors, and threats in diagnosis with the pfhrp2/3 gene deletion, malaria remains a major health concern. Motivated by these reasons, the primary aim of this work was a contribution to the antimalarial pipeline through in silico approaches focusing on P. falciparum. We first intended an exploration of malarial targets through a proteome scale screening on 36 targets using multiple metrics to account for the multi-objective nature of drug discovery. The continuous growth of structural data offers the ideal scenario for mining new MoAs covering antimalarials TCPs. This was combined with a repurposing strategy using a set of orally available FDA approved drugs. Further, use was made of time- and cost-effective strategies combining QVina-W efficiency metrics that integrate molecular properties, GRIM rescoring for molecular interactions and a hydrogen mass repartitioning (HMR) molecular dynamics (MD) scheme for accelerated development of antimalarials in the context of resistance. This pipeline further integrates a complex ranking for better drug-target selectivity, and normalization strategies to overcome docking scoring function bias. The different metrics, ranking, normalization strategies and their combinations were first assessed using their mean ranking error (MRE). A version combining all metrics was used to select 36 unique protein-ligand complexes, assessed in MD, with the final retention of 25. From the 16 in vitro tested hits of the 25, fingolimod, abiraterone, prazosin, and terazosin showed antiplasmodial activity with IC50 2.21, 3.37, 16.67 and 34.72 μM respectively and of these, only fingolimod was found to be not safe with respect to human cell viability. These compounds were predicted active on different molecular targets, abiraterone was predicted to interact with a putative liver-stage essential target, hence promising as a transmission-blocking agent. The pipeline had a promising 25% hit rate considering the proteome-scale and use of cost-effective approaches. Secondly, we focused on Plasmodium falciparum 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate reductoisomerase (PfDXR) using a more extensive screening pipeline to overcome some of the current in silico screening limitations. Starting from the ZINC lead-like library of ~3M, hierarchical ligand-based virtual screening (LBVS) and structure-based virtual screening (SBVS) approaches with molecular docking and re-scoring using eleven scoring functions (SFs) were used. Later ranking with an exponential consensus strategy was included. Selected hits were further assessed through Molecular Mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann Surface Area (MM-PBSA), advanced MD sampling in a ligand pulling simulations and (Weighted Histogram Analysis Method) WHAM analysis for umbrella sampling (US) to derive binding free energies. Four leads had better predicted affinities in US than LC5, a 280 nM potent PfDXR inhibitor with ZINC000050633276 showing a promising binding of -20.43 kcal/mol. As shown with fosmidomycin, DXR inhibition offers fast acting compounds fulfilling antimalarials TCP1. Yet, fosmidomycin has a high polarity causing its short half-life and hampering its clinical use. These leads scaffolds are different from fosmidomycin and hence may offer better pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties and may also be promising for lead optimization. A combined analysis of residues’ contributions to the free energy of binding in MM-PBSA and to steered molecular dynamics (SMD) Fmax indicated GLU233, CYS268, SER270, TRP296, and HIS341 as exploitable for compound optimization. Finally, we updated the SANCDB library with new NPs and their commercially available analogs as a solution to NP availability. The library is extended to 1005 compounds from its initial 600 compounds and the database is integrated to Mcule and Molport APIs for analogs automatic update. The new set may contribute to virtual screening and to antimalarials as the most effective ones have NP origin. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2021
- Full Text:
- Authors: Diallo, Bakary N’tji
- Date: 2021-10-29
- Subjects: Plasmodium falciparum , Malaria -- Chemotherapy , Molecular dynamics , Antimalarials , Cheminformatics , Drug development , Ligand binding (Biochemistry) , Plasmodium falciparum1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate reductoisomerase (PfDXR) , South African Natural Compounds Database
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/192798 , vital:45265 , 10.21504/10962/192798
- Description: Malaria is a millennia-old disease with the first recorded cases dating back to 2700 BC found in Chinese medical records, and later in other civilizations. It has claimed human lives to such an extent that there are a notable associated socio-economic consequences. Currently, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), Africa holds the highest disease burden with 94% of deaths and 82% of cases with P. falciparum having ~100% prevalence. Chemotherapy, such as artemisinin combination therapy, has been and continues to be the work horse in the fight against the disease, together with seasonal malaria chemoprevention and the use of insecticides. Natural products such as quinine and artemisinin are particularly important in terms of their antimalarial activity. The emphasis in current chemotherapy research is the need for time and cost-effective workflows focussed on new mechanisms of action (MoAs) covering the target candidate profiles (TCPs). Despite a decline in cases over the past decades with, countries increasingly becoming certified malaria free, a stalling trend has been observed in the past five years resulting in missing the 2020 Global Technical Strategy (GTS) milestones. With no effective vaccine, a reduction in funding, slower drug approval than resistance emergence from resistant and invasive vectors, and threats in diagnosis with the pfhrp2/3 gene deletion, malaria remains a major health concern. Motivated by these reasons, the primary aim of this work was a contribution to the antimalarial pipeline through in silico approaches focusing on P. falciparum. We first intended an exploration of malarial targets through a proteome scale screening on 36 targets using multiple metrics to account for the multi-objective nature of drug discovery. The continuous growth of structural data offers the ideal scenario for mining new MoAs covering antimalarials TCPs. This was combined with a repurposing strategy using a set of orally available FDA approved drugs. Further, use was made of time- and cost-effective strategies combining QVina-W efficiency metrics that integrate molecular properties, GRIM rescoring for molecular interactions and a hydrogen mass repartitioning (HMR) molecular dynamics (MD) scheme for accelerated development of antimalarials in the context of resistance. This pipeline further integrates a complex ranking for better drug-target selectivity, and normalization strategies to overcome docking scoring function bias. The different metrics, ranking, normalization strategies and their combinations were first assessed using their mean ranking error (MRE). A version combining all metrics was used to select 36 unique protein-ligand complexes, assessed in MD, with the final retention of 25. From the 16 in vitro tested hits of the 25, fingolimod, abiraterone, prazosin, and terazosin showed antiplasmodial activity with IC50 2.21, 3.37, 16.67 and 34.72 μM respectively and of these, only fingolimod was found to be not safe with respect to human cell viability. These compounds were predicted active on different molecular targets, abiraterone was predicted to interact with a putative liver-stage essential target, hence promising as a transmission-blocking agent. The pipeline had a promising 25% hit rate considering the proteome-scale and use of cost-effective approaches. Secondly, we focused on Plasmodium falciparum 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate reductoisomerase (PfDXR) using a more extensive screening pipeline to overcome some of the current in silico screening limitations. Starting from the ZINC lead-like library of ~3M, hierarchical ligand-based virtual screening (LBVS) and structure-based virtual screening (SBVS) approaches with molecular docking and re-scoring using eleven scoring functions (SFs) were used. Later ranking with an exponential consensus strategy was included. Selected hits were further assessed through Molecular Mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann Surface Area (MM-PBSA), advanced MD sampling in a ligand pulling simulations and (Weighted Histogram Analysis Method) WHAM analysis for umbrella sampling (US) to derive binding free energies. Four leads had better predicted affinities in US than LC5, a 280 nM potent PfDXR inhibitor with ZINC000050633276 showing a promising binding of -20.43 kcal/mol. As shown with fosmidomycin, DXR inhibition offers fast acting compounds fulfilling antimalarials TCP1. Yet, fosmidomycin has a high polarity causing its short half-life and hampering its clinical use. These leads scaffolds are different from fosmidomycin and hence may offer better pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties and may also be promising for lead optimization. A combined analysis of residues’ contributions to the free energy of binding in MM-PBSA and to steered molecular dynamics (SMD) Fmax indicated GLU233, CYS268, SER270, TRP296, and HIS341 as exploitable for compound optimization. Finally, we updated the SANCDB library with new NPs and their commercially available analogs as a solution to NP availability. The library is extended to 1005 compounds from its initial 600 compounds and the database is integrated to Mcule and Molport APIs for analogs automatic update. The new set may contribute to virtual screening and to antimalarials as the most effective ones have NP origin. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, Biochemistry and Microbiology, 2021
- Full Text:
Application of machine learning, molecular modelling and structural data mining against antiretroviral drug resistance in HIV-1
- Sheik Amamuddy, Olivier Serge André
- Authors: Sheik Amamuddy, Olivier Serge André
- Date: 2020
- Subjects: Machine learning , Molecules -- Models , Data mining , Neural networks (Computer science) , Antiretroviral agents , Protease inhibitors , Drug resistance , Multidrug resistance , Molecular dynamics , Renin-angiotensin system , HIV (Viruses) -- South Africa , HIV (Viruses) -- Social aspects -- South Africa , South African Natural Compounds Database
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/115964 , vital:34282
- Description: Millions are affected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) world wide, even though the death toll is on the decline. Antiretrovirals (ARVs), more specifically protease inhibitors have shown tremendous success since their introduction into therapy since the mid 1990’s by slowing down progression to the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). However, Drug Resistance Mutations (DRMs) are constantly selected for due to viral adaptation, making drugs less effective over time. The current challenge is to manage the infection optimally with a limited set of drugs, with differing associated levels of toxicities in the face of a virus that (1) exists as a quasispecies, (2) may transmit acquired DRMs to drug-naive individuals and (3) that can manifest class-wide resistance due to similarities in design. The presence of latent reservoirs, unawareness of infection status, education and various socio-economic factors make the problem even more complex. Adequate timing and choice of drug prescription together with treatment adherence are very important as drug toxicities, drug failure and sub-optimal treatment regimens leave room for further development of drug resistance. While CD4 cell count and the determination of viral load from patients in resource-limited settings are very helpful to track how well a patient’s immune system is able to keep the virus in check, they can be lengthy in determining whether an ARV is effective. Phenosense assay kits answer this problem using viruses engineered to contain the patient sequences and evaluating their growth in the presence of different ARVs, but this can be expensive and too involved for routine checks. As a cheaper and faster alternative, genotypic assays provide similar information from HIV pol sequences obtained from blood samples, inferring ARV efficacy on the basis of drug resistance mutation patterns. However, these are inherently complex and the various methods of in silico prediction, such as Geno2pheno, REGA and Stanford HIVdb do not always agree in every case, even though this gap decreases as the list of resistance mutations is updated. A major gap in HIV treatment is that the information used for predicting drug resistance is mainly computed from data containing an overwhelming majority of B subtype HIV, when these only comprise about 12% of the worldwide HIV infections. In addition to growing evidence that drug resistance is subtype-related, it is intuitive to hypothesize that as subtyping is a phylogenetic classification, the more divergent a subtype is from the strains used in training prediction models, the less their resistance profiles would correlate. For the aforementioned reasons, we used a multi-faceted approach to attack the virus in multiple ways. This research aimed to (1) improve resistance prediction methods by focusing solely on the available subtype, (2) mine structural information pertaining to resistance in order to find any exploitable weak points and increase knowledge of the mechanistic processes of drug resistance in HIV protease. Finally, (3) we screen for protease inhibitors amongst a database of natural compounds [the South African natural compound database (SANCDB)] to find molecules or molecular properties usable to come up with improved inhibition against the drug target. In this work, structural information was mined using the Anisotropic Network Model, Dynamics Cross-Correlation, Perturbation Response Scanning, residue contact network analysis and the radius of gyration. These methods failed to give any resistance-associated patterns in terms of natural movement, internal correlated motions, residue perturbation response, relational behaviour and global compaction respectively. Applications of drug docking, homology-modelling and energy minimization for generating features suitable for machine-learning were not very promising, and rather suggest that the value of binding energies by themselves from Vina may not be very reliable quantitatively. All these failures lead to a refinement that resulted in a highly sensitive statistically-guided network construction and analysis, which leads to key findings in the early dynamics associated with resistance across all PI drugs. The latter experiment unravelled a conserved lateral expansion motion occurring at the flap elbows, and an associated contraction that drives the base of the dimerization domain towards the catalytic site’s floor in the case of drug resistance. Interestingly, we found that despite the conserved movement, bond angles were degenerate. Alongside, 16 Artificial Neural Network models were optimised for HIV proteases and reverse transcriptase inhibitors, with performances on par with Stanford HIVdb. Finally, we prioritised 9 compounds with potential protease inhibitory activity using virtual screening and molecular dynamics (MD) to additionally suggest a promising modification to one of the compounds. This yielded another molecule inhibiting equally well both opened and closed receptor target conformations, whereby each of the compounds had been selected against an array of multi-drug-resistant receptor variants. While a main hurdle was a lack of non-B subtype data, our findings, especially from the statistically-guided network analysis, may extrapolate to a certain extent to them as the level of conservation was very high within subtype B, despite all the present variations. This network construction method lays down a sensitive approach for analysing a pair of alternate phenotypes for which complex patterns prevail, given a sufficient number of experimental units. During the course of research a weighted contact mapping tool was developed to compare renin-angiotensinogen variants and packaged as part of the MD-TASK tool suite. Finally the functionality, compatibility and performance of the MODE-TASK tool were evaluated and confirmed for both Python2.7.x and Python3.x, for the analysis of normals modes from single protein structures and essential modes from MD trajectories. These techniques and tools collectively add onto the conventional means of MD analysis.
- Full Text:
- Authors: Sheik Amamuddy, Olivier Serge André
- Date: 2020
- Subjects: Machine learning , Molecules -- Models , Data mining , Neural networks (Computer science) , Antiretroviral agents , Protease inhibitors , Drug resistance , Multidrug resistance , Molecular dynamics , Renin-angiotensin system , HIV (Viruses) -- South Africa , HIV (Viruses) -- Social aspects -- South Africa , South African Natural Compounds Database
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/115964 , vital:34282
- Description: Millions are affected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) world wide, even though the death toll is on the decline. Antiretrovirals (ARVs), more specifically protease inhibitors have shown tremendous success since their introduction into therapy since the mid 1990’s by slowing down progression to the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). However, Drug Resistance Mutations (DRMs) are constantly selected for due to viral adaptation, making drugs less effective over time. The current challenge is to manage the infection optimally with a limited set of drugs, with differing associated levels of toxicities in the face of a virus that (1) exists as a quasispecies, (2) may transmit acquired DRMs to drug-naive individuals and (3) that can manifest class-wide resistance due to similarities in design. The presence of latent reservoirs, unawareness of infection status, education and various socio-economic factors make the problem even more complex. Adequate timing and choice of drug prescription together with treatment adherence are very important as drug toxicities, drug failure and sub-optimal treatment regimens leave room for further development of drug resistance. While CD4 cell count and the determination of viral load from patients in resource-limited settings are very helpful to track how well a patient’s immune system is able to keep the virus in check, they can be lengthy in determining whether an ARV is effective. Phenosense assay kits answer this problem using viruses engineered to contain the patient sequences and evaluating their growth in the presence of different ARVs, but this can be expensive and too involved for routine checks. As a cheaper and faster alternative, genotypic assays provide similar information from HIV pol sequences obtained from blood samples, inferring ARV efficacy on the basis of drug resistance mutation patterns. However, these are inherently complex and the various methods of in silico prediction, such as Geno2pheno, REGA and Stanford HIVdb do not always agree in every case, even though this gap decreases as the list of resistance mutations is updated. A major gap in HIV treatment is that the information used for predicting drug resistance is mainly computed from data containing an overwhelming majority of B subtype HIV, when these only comprise about 12% of the worldwide HIV infections. In addition to growing evidence that drug resistance is subtype-related, it is intuitive to hypothesize that as subtyping is a phylogenetic classification, the more divergent a subtype is from the strains used in training prediction models, the less their resistance profiles would correlate. For the aforementioned reasons, we used a multi-faceted approach to attack the virus in multiple ways. This research aimed to (1) improve resistance prediction methods by focusing solely on the available subtype, (2) mine structural information pertaining to resistance in order to find any exploitable weak points and increase knowledge of the mechanistic processes of drug resistance in HIV protease. Finally, (3) we screen for protease inhibitors amongst a database of natural compounds [the South African natural compound database (SANCDB)] to find molecules or molecular properties usable to come up with improved inhibition against the drug target. In this work, structural information was mined using the Anisotropic Network Model, Dynamics Cross-Correlation, Perturbation Response Scanning, residue contact network analysis and the radius of gyration. These methods failed to give any resistance-associated patterns in terms of natural movement, internal correlated motions, residue perturbation response, relational behaviour and global compaction respectively. Applications of drug docking, homology-modelling and energy minimization for generating features suitable for machine-learning were not very promising, and rather suggest that the value of binding energies by themselves from Vina may not be very reliable quantitatively. All these failures lead to a refinement that resulted in a highly sensitive statistically-guided network construction and analysis, which leads to key findings in the early dynamics associated with resistance across all PI drugs. The latter experiment unravelled a conserved lateral expansion motion occurring at the flap elbows, and an associated contraction that drives the base of the dimerization domain towards the catalytic site’s floor in the case of drug resistance. Interestingly, we found that despite the conserved movement, bond angles were degenerate. Alongside, 16 Artificial Neural Network models were optimised for HIV proteases and reverse transcriptase inhibitors, with performances on par with Stanford HIVdb. Finally, we prioritised 9 compounds with potential protease inhibitory activity using virtual screening and molecular dynamics (MD) to additionally suggest a promising modification to one of the compounds. This yielded another molecule inhibiting equally well both opened and closed receptor target conformations, whereby each of the compounds had been selected against an array of multi-drug-resistant receptor variants. While a main hurdle was a lack of non-B subtype data, our findings, especially from the statistically-guided network analysis, may extrapolate to a certain extent to them as the level of conservation was very high within subtype B, despite all the present variations. This network construction method lays down a sensitive approach for analysing a pair of alternate phenotypes for which complex patterns prevail, given a sufficient number of experimental units. During the course of research a weighted contact mapping tool was developed to compare renin-angiotensinogen variants and packaged as part of the MD-TASK tool suite. Finally the functionality, compatibility and performance of the MODE-TASK tool were evaluated and confirmed for both Python2.7.x and Python3.x, for the analysis of normals modes from single protein structures and essential modes from MD trajectories. These techniques and tools collectively add onto the conventional means of MD analysis.
- Full Text:
A dynamics based analysis of allosteric modulation in heat shock proteins
- Authors: Penkler, David Lawrence
- Date: 2019
- Subjects: Heat shock proteins , Molecular chaperones , Allosteric regulation , Homeostasis , Protein kinases , Transcription factors , Adenosine triphosphatase , Cancer -- Chemotherapy , Molecular dynamics , High throughput screening (Drug development)
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/115948 , vital:34273
- Description: The 70 kDa and 90 kDa heat shock proteins (Hsp70 and Hsp90) are molecular chaperones that play central roles in maintaining cellular homeostasis in all organisms of life with the exception of archaea. In addition to their general chaperone function in protein quality control, Hsp70 and Hsp90 cooperate in the regulation and activity of some 200 known natively folded protein clients which include protein kinases, transcription factors and receptors, many of which are implicated as key regulators of essential signal transduction pathways. Both chaperones are considered to be large multi-domain proteins that rely on ATPase activity and co-chaperone interactions to regulate their conformational cycles for peptide binding and release. The unique positioning of Hsp90 at the crossroads of several fundamental cellular pathways coupled with its known association with diverse oncogenic peptide clients has brought the molecular chaperone under increasing interest as a potential anti-cancer target that is crucially implicated with all eight hallmarks of the disease. Current orthosteric drug discovery efforts aimed at the inhibition of the ATPase domain of Hsp90 have been limited due to high levels of associated toxicity. In an effort to circumnavigate this, the combined focus of research efforts is shifting toward alternative approaches such as interference with co-chaperone binding and the allosteric inhibition/activation of the molecular chaperone. The overriding aim of this thesis was to demonstrate how the computational technique of Perturbation response scanning (PRS) coupled with all-atom molecular dynamics simulations (MD) and dynamic residue interaction network (DRN) analysis can be used as a viable strategy to efficiently scan and accurately identify allosteric control element capable of modulating the functional dynamics of a protein. In pursuit of this goal, this thesis also contributes to the current understanding of the nucleotide dependent allosteric mechanisms at play in cellular functionality of both Hsp70 and Hsp90. All-atom MD simulations of E. coli DnaK provided evidence of nucleotide driven modulation of conformational dynamics in both the catalytically active and inactive states. PRS analysis employed on these trajectories demonstrated sensitivity toward bound nucleotide and peptide substrate, and provided evidence of a putative allosterically active intermediate state between the ATPase active and inactive conformational states. Simultaneous binding of ATP and peptide substrate was found to allosterically prime the chaperone for interstate conversion regardless of the transition direction. Detailed analysis of these allosterically primed states revealed select residue sites capable of selecting a coordinate shift towards the opposite conformational state. In an effort to validate these results, the predicted allosteric hot spot sites were cross-validated with known experimental works and found to overlap with functional sites implicated in allosteric signal propagation and ATPase activation in Hsp70. This study presented for the first time, the application of PRS as a suitable diagnostic tool for the elucidation and quantification of the allosteric potential of select residues to effect functionally relevant global conformational rearrangements. The PRS methodology described in this study was packaged within the Python programming environment in the MD-TASK software suite for command-line ease of use and made freely available. Homology modelling techniques were used to address the lack of experimental structural data for the human cytosolic isoform of Hsp90 and for the first time provided accurate full-length structural models of human Hsp90α in fully-closed and partially-open conformations. Long-range all-atom MD simulations of these structures revealed nucleotide driven modulation of conformational dynamics in Hsp90. Subsequent DRN and PRS analysis of these MD trajectories allowed for the quantification and elucidation of nucleotide driven allosteric modulation in the molecular chaperone. A detailed PRS analysis revealed allosteric inter-domain coupling between the extreme terminals of the chaperone in response to external force perturbations at either domain. Furthermore PRS also identified several individual residue sites that are capable of selecting conformational rearrangements towards functionally relevant states which may be considered to be putative allosteric target sites for future drug discovery efforts Molecular docking techniques were employed to investigate the modulation of conformational dynamics of human Hsp90α in response to ligand binding interactions at two identified allosteric sites at the C-terminal. High throughput screening of a small library of natural compounds indigenous to South Africa revealed three hit compounds at these sites: Cephalostatin 17, 20(29)-Lupene-3β isoferulate and 3'-Bromorubrolide F. All-atom MD simulations on these protein-ligand complexes coupled with DRN analysis and several advanced trajectory based analysis techniques provided evidence of selective allosteric modulation of Hsp90α conformational dynamics in response to the identity and location of the bound ligands. Ligands bound at the four-helix bundle presented as putative allosteric inhibitors of Hsp90α, driving conformational dynamics in favour of dimer opening and possibly dimer separation. Meanwhile, ligand interactions at an adjacent sub-pocket located near the interface between the middle and C-terminal domains demonstrated allosteric activation of the chaperone, modulating conformational dynamics in favour of the fully-closed catalytically active conformational state. Taken together, the data presented in this thesis contributes to the understanding of allosteric modulation of conformational dynamics in Hsp70 and Hsp90, and provides a suitable platform for future biochemical and drug discovery studies. Furthermore, the molecular docking and computational identification of allosteric compounds with suitable binding affinity for allosteric sites at the CTD of human Hsp90α provide for the first time “proof-of-principle” for the use of PRS in conjunction with MD simulations and DRN analysis as a suitable method for the rapid identification of allosteric sites in proteins that can be probed by small molecule interaction. The data presented in this section could pave the way for future allosteric drug discovery studies for the treatment of Hsp90 associated pathologies.
- Full Text:
- Authors: Penkler, David Lawrence
- Date: 2019
- Subjects: Heat shock proteins , Molecular chaperones , Allosteric regulation , Homeostasis , Protein kinases , Transcription factors , Adenosine triphosphatase , Cancer -- Chemotherapy , Molecular dynamics , High throughput screening (Drug development)
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/115948 , vital:34273
- Description: The 70 kDa and 90 kDa heat shock proteins (Hsp70 and Hsp90) are molecular chaperones that play central roles in maintaining cellular homeostasis in all organisms of life with the exception of archaea. In addition to their general chaperone function in protein quality control, Hsp70 and Hsp90 cooperate in the regulation and activity of some 200 known natively folded protein clients which include protein kinases, transcription factors and receptors, many of which are implicated as key regulators of essential signal transduction pathways. Both chaperones are considered to be large multi-domain proteins that rely on ATPase activity and co-chaperone interactions to regulate their conformational cycles for peptide binding and release. The unique positioning of Hsp90 at the crossroads of several fundamental cellular pathways coupled with its known association with diverse oncogenic peptide clients has brought the molecular chaperone under increasing interest as a potential anti-cancer target that is crucially implicated with all eight hallmarks of the disease. Current orthosteric drug discovery efforts aimed at the inhibition of the ATPase domain of Hsp90 have been limited due to high levels of associated toxicity. In an effort to circumnavigate this, the combined focus of research efforts is shifting toward alternative approaches such as interference with co-chaperone binding and the allosteric inhibition/activation of the molecular chaperone. The overriding aim of this thesis was to demonstrate how the computational technique of Perturbation response scanning (PRS) coupled with all-atom molecular dynamics simulations (MD) and dynamic residue interaction network (DRN) analysis can be used as a viable strategy to efficiently scan and accurately identify allosteric control element capable of modulating the functional dynamics of a protein. In pursuit of this goal, this thesis also contributes to the current understanding of the nucleotide dependent allosteric mechanisms at play in cellular functionality of both Hsp70 and Hsp90. All-atom MD simulations of E. coli DnaK provided evidence of nucleotide driven modulation of conformational dynamics in both the catalytically active and inactive states. PRS analysis employed on these trajectories demonstrated sensitivity toward bound nucleotide and peptide substrate, and provided evidence of a putative allosterically active intermediate state between the ATPase active and inactive conformational states. Simultaneous binding of ATP and peptide substrate was found to allosterically prime the chaperone for interstate conversion regardless of the transition direction. Detailed analysis of these allosterically primed states revealed select residue sites capable of selecting a coordinate shift towards the opposite conformational state. In an effort to validate these results, the predicted allosteric hot spot sites were cross-validated with known experimental works and found to overlap with functional sites implicated in allosteric signal propagation and ATPase activation in Hsp70. This study presented for the first time, the application of PRS as a suitable diagnostic tool for the elucidation and quantification of the allosteric potential of select residues to effect functionally relevant global conformational rearrangements. The PRS methodology described in this study was packaged within the Python programming environment in the MD-TASK software suite for command-line ease of use and made freely available. Homology modelling techniques were used to address the lack of experimental structural data for the human cytosolic isoform of Hsp90 and for the first time provided accurate full-length structural models of human Hsp90α in fully-closed and partially-open conformations. Long-range all-atom MD simulations of these structures revealed nucleotide driven modulation of conformational dynamics in Hsp90. Subsequent DRN and PRS analysis of these MD trajectories allowed for the quantification and elucidation of nucleotide driven allosteric modulation in the molecular chaperone. A detailed PRS analysis revealed allosteric inter-domain coupling between the extreme terminals of the chaperone in response to external force perturbations at either domain. Furthermore PRS also identified several individual residue sites that are capable of selecting conformational rearrangements towards functionally relevant states which may be considered to be putative allosteric target sites for future drug discovery efforts Molecular docking techniques were employed to investigate the modulation of conformational dynamics of human Hsp90α in response to ligand binding interactions at two identified allosteric sites at the C-terminal. High throughput screening of a small library of natural compounds indigenous to South Africa revealed three hit compounds at these sites: Cephalostatin 17, 20(29)-Lupene-3β isoferulate and 3'-Bromorubrolide F. All-atom MD simulations on these protein-ligand complexes coupled with DRN analysis and several advanced trajectory based analysis techniques provided evidence of selective allosteric modulation of Hsp90α conformational dynamics in response to the identity and location of the bound ligands. Ligands bound at the four-helix bundle presented as putative allosteric inhibitors of Hsp90α, driving conformational dynamics in favour of dimer opening and possibly dimer separation. Meanwhile, ligand interactions at an adjacent sub-pocket located near the interface between the middle and C-terminal domains demonstrated allosteric activation of the chaperone, modulating conformational dynamics in favour of the fully-closed catalytically active conformational state. Taken together, the data presented in this thesis contributes to the understanding of allosteric modulation of conformational dynamics in Hsp70 and Hsp90, and provides a suitable platform for future biochemical and drug discovery studies. Furthermore, the molecular docking and computational identification of allosteric compounds with suitable binding affinity for allosteric sites at the CTD of human Hsp90α provide for the first time “proof-of-principle” for the use of PRS in conjunction with MD simulations and DRN analysis as a suitable method for the rapid identification of allosteric sites in proteins that can be probed by small molecule interaction. The data presented in this section could pave the way for future allosteric drug discovery studies for the treatment of Hsp90 associated pathologies.
- Full Text:
Bioinformatics tool development with a focus on structural bioinformatics and the analysis of genetic variation in humans
- Authors: Brown, David K
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Bioinformatics , Human genetics -- Variation , High performance computing , Workflow management systems , Molecular dynamics , Next generation sequencing , Human Mutation Analysis (HUMA)
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/60708 , vital:27820
- Description: This thesis is divided into three parts, united under the general theme of bioinformatics tool development and variation analysis. Part 1 describes the design and development of the Job Management System (JMS), a workflow management system for high performance computing (HPC). HPC has become an integral part of bioinformatics. Computational methods for molecular dynamics and next generation sequencing (NGS) analysis, which require complex calculations on large datasets, are not yet feasible on desktop computers. As such, powerful computer clusters have been employed to perform these calculations. However, making use of these HPC clusters requires familiarity with command line interfaces. This excludes a large number of researchers from taking advantage of these resources. JMS was developed as a tool to make it easier for researchers without a computer science background to make use of HPC. Additionally, JMS can be used to host computational tools and pipelines and generates both web-based interfaces and RESTful APIs for those tools. The web-based interfaces can be used to quickly and easily submit jobs to the underlying cluster. The RESTful web API, on the other hand, allows JMS to provided backend functionality for external tools and web servers that want to run jobs on the cluster. Numerous tools and workflows have already been added to JMS, several of which have been incorporated into external web servers. One such web server is the Human Mutation Analysis (HUMA) web server and database. HUMA, the topic of part 2 of this thesis, is a platform for the analysis of genetic variation in humans. HUMA aggregates data from various existing databases into a single, connected and related database. The advantages of this are realized in the powerful querying abilities that it provides. HUMA includes protein, gene, disease, and variation data and can be searched from the angle of any one of these categories. For example, searching for a protein will return the protein data (e.g. protein sequences, structures, domains and families, and other meta-data). However, the related nature of the database means that genes, diseases, variation, and literature related to the protein will also be returned, giving users a powerful and holistic view of all data associated with the protein. HUMA also provides links to the original sources of the data, allowing users to follow the links to find additional details. HUMA aims to be a platform for the analysis of genetic variation. As such, it also provides tools to visualize and analyse the data (several of which run on the underlying cluster, via JMS). These tools include alignment and 3D structure visualization, homology modeling, variant analysis, and the ability to upload custom variation datasets and map them to proteins, genes and diseases. HUMA also provides collaboration features, allowing users to share and discuss datasets and job results. Finally, part 3 of this thesis focused on the development of a suite of tools, MD-TASK, to analyse genetic variation at the protein structure level via network analysis of molecular dynamics simulations. The use of MD-TASK in combination with the tools developed in the previous parts of this thesis is showcased via the analysis of variation in the renin-angiotensinogen complex, a vital part of the renin-angiotensin system.
- Full Text:
- Authors: Brown, David K
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Bioinformatics , Human genetics -- Variation , High performance computing , Workflow management systems , Molecular dynamics , Next generation sequencing , Human Mutation Analysis (HUMA)
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/60708 , vital:27820
- Description: This thesis is divided into three parts, united under the general theme of bioinformatics tool development and variation analysis. Part 1 describes the design and development of the Job Management System (JMS), a workflow management system for high performance computing (HPC). HPC has become an integral part of bioinformatics. Computational methods for molecular dynamics and next generation sequencing (NGS) analysis, which require complex calculations on large datasets, are not yet feasible on desktop computers. As such, powerful computer clusters have been employed to perform these calculations. However, making use of these HPC clusters requires familiarity with command line interfaces. This excludes a large number of researchers from taking advantage of these resources. JMS was developed as a tool to make it easier for researchers without a computer science background to make use of HPC. Additionally, JMS can be used to host computational tools and pipelines and generates both web-based interfaces and RESTful APIs for those tools. The web-based interfaces can be used to quickly and easily submit jobs to the underlying cluster. The RESTful web API, on the other hand, allows JMS to provided backend functionality for external tools and web servers that want to run jobs on the cluster. Numerous tools and workflows have already been added to JMS, several of which have been incorporated into external web servers. One such web server is the Human Mutation Analysis (HUMA) web server and database. HUMA, the topic of part 2 of this thesis, is a platform for the analysis of genetic variation in humans. HUMA aggregates data from various existing databases into a single, connected and related database. The advantages of this are realized in the powerful querying abilities that it provides. HUMA includes protein, gene, disease, and variation data and can be searched from the angle of any one of these categories. For example, searching for a protein will return the protein data (e.g. protein sequences, structures, domains and families, and other meta-data). However, the related nature of the database means that genes, diseases, variation, and literature related to the protein will also be returned, giving users a powerful and holistic view of all data associated with the protein. HUMA also provides links to the original sources of the data, allowing users to follow the links to find additional details. HUMA aims to be a platform for the analysis of genetic variation. As such, it also provides tools to visualize and analyse the data (several of which run on the underlying cluster, via JMS). These tools include alignment and 3D structure visualization, homology modeling, variant analysis, and the ability to upload custom variation datasets and map them to proteins, genes and diseases. HUMA also provides collaboration features, allowing users to share and discuss datasets and job results. Finally, part 3 of this thesis focused on the development of a suite of tools, MD-TASK, to analyse genetic variation at the protein structure level via network analysis of molecular dynamics simulations. The use of MD-TASK in combination with the tools developed in the previous parts of this thesis is showcased via the analysis of variation in the renin-angiotensinogen complex, a vital part of the renin-angiotensin system.
- Full Text:
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