Role of Guanidinium-Carboxylate Interaction in Enzyme Inhibition with Implication for Drug Design

02 July 2019, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Guanidinium cation (Gdm+) interacts strongly with amino acids of different polarities modulating protein structure and function. Using density functional theory calculations and molecular dynamics simulations we studied the interaction of Gdm+ with carboxylate ions mimicking its interaction with acidic amino acids and explored its effect in enzymatic folding and activity. We show that in low concentrations, Gdm+ stabilizes carboxylate ion dimers by acting as a bridge between them thereby reducing the electrostatic repulsion. We further show that this carboxylate-Gdm+-carboxylate interaction can have an effect on the structure-activity relationship in enzymes with active sites containing two acidic residues. Using five enzymes (hen egg white lysozyme, T4 lysozyme, HIV-1 protease, pepsin and creatine kinase), which have two acidic amino acids in their active sites, we show that in low concentrations (< 0.5 M), Gdm+ strongly binds to the enzyme active site, thereby potentially inhibiting its activity without unfolding it. This can lead to misleading conclusions in experiments, which infer the extent of enzyme unfolding from activity measurements. However, the carboxylate-Gdm+-carboxylate specific interaction can be exploited in drug discovery as drugs based on guanidinium derivatives are already being used to treat various maladies related to muscle weakness, cancer, diabetes etc. Guanidinium derivatives can be designed as potential drug molecules to inhibit activity or functioning of enzymes, which have binding pockets with two acidic residues in close vicinity.

Keywords

Guanidinium Group
Density funcational theory
Molecular Dynamics Simulation Molecular dynamics
Rational Drug Design
Structure-Activity relationship
Enzyme inhibitors

Supplementary materials

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Asp Gdm chem arxiv SI
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