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Application of amide hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry to map interactions of low affinity fragment and ligands is demonstrated. This protocol describes a method for distinguishing orthosteric binding from allosteric changes accompanying high affinity ligand and low-affinity fragment binding to target protein, Hsp90, and finds important applications in fragment-based drug design.
A fundamental challenge in deciphering protein-ligand interactions is distinguishing binding changes at orthosteric sites from the associated allosteric changes at distal sites, as structural data does not always reveal allostery. Ligands mediate both orthosteric and allosteric effects on target proteins and hence, in the context of screening low affinity fragments, it is important to describe fragment efficacy in terms of both direct binding and long-range allosteric responses. This presents a significant problem especially for low affinity ligands. Amide Hydrogen Deuterium Exchange Mass Spectrometry (HDXMS) is a robust method that can provide structural insights and information on conformational dynamics for both high affinity and transient protein-ligand interactions. Here, we describe the use of HDXMS on the ATPase domain of Hsp90, to parse orthosteric and allosteric effects mediated by two high affinity ligands and two low affinity fragment compounds. A comparison of deuterium exchange in ligand-bound-Hsp90 versus apo-Hsp90 was used to describe composite changes that combine both orthosteric effects and allosteric changes. Allostery can be discerned by correlating HDXMS results with structural information about orthosteric binding from crystallographic structures of protein-ligand interactions. Results from this approach indicated that fragments and ligands both mediate interactions at overlapping orthosteric sites but elicit distinct allosteric effects. However, orthosteric interactions of Hsp90 with fragments are inherently weaker due to faster dissociation rates (koff). This approach finds important applications in fragment screening, ranking, and lead compound design in fragment-based drug discovery.
Drug development necessitates a complete understanding of the interaction of natural ligands with their target proteins, and utilizes this information to find alternate inhibitors or activators. Traditional drug development pipelines involve a high throughput screening (HTS) strategy to identify lead compounds1. An alternative strategy is to use fragments as building blocks for lead compound generation. These have multiple advantages over traditional HTS strategies, including but not limited to, being intellectual property-free, optimizable, and modular2. Fragments are defined as small chemical compounds (<300 Da) wh....
1. Preparing D 2 O buffer, Quench and Hsp90 Protein Solutions
In order to identify the reporter peptides that represent changes in Hsp90 upon ligand binding, changes in deuterium uptake were quantified for Hsp90 in the presence and absence of the high affinity ligands. Differences in deuterium uptake were determined at pepsin-proteolyzed peptides between the high-affinity-ligand bound-Hsp90 and ligand-free-Hsp90 and reporter peptides that showed significant differences in deuterium uptake (>= 0.5 Da) were identified. The error in a single deuter.......
Critical steps in the protocol: It is essential that the pH of solutions, including protein buffers and LC-solutions, are all maintained at a pH of 2.5 to minimize loss of deuterium labelling. It is also critical that deuterium exchange experiments be carried out at saturating concentrations of ligands to maintain a homogenous population of ligand-bound protein. This can be estimated from the ligands' or fragments' dissociation constants and need to be consistent among all fragment-protein deuter.......
This work was supported by a grant from Singapore Ministry of Education Academic research fund-Tier 3 (MOE2012-T3-1-008) and Tier1.
....Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Deuterium Oxide | Cambridge Isotope, Tewksbury, MA | DLM-6-1000 | |
HEPES Buffer | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | H3375Â SIGMA | |
Glycerol | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | G5516 | |
NaCl | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | S7653 | |
TCEP | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | C4706 | |
DMSO | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | D8418 | |
TFA | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | 302031 | |
FA | Fisher Scientific, Singapore | A117-50 | |
Glu-fibrinogen | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | F3261 | |
Leucine-Enkaphalin | Waters, Milford, MA | 186006013 | |
ACN | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | 34851 | |
pNIC28-Bsa4 vector | Addgene, Cambridge, MA | 26103 | |
BL21(DE3) E. coli strain | Merck-millipore Novagen, Singapore | 69450 | |
Terrific Broth medium | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | T9179 | |
Kanamycin | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | 60615 | |
chloramphenicol | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | C0378 | |
isopropyl β-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | IPTG-RO ROCHE | |
imidazole | Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | I5513 | |
Protease Inhibitor Mixture Set III, EDTA free | Merck-Millipore, Singapore | 539134 | |
Vibra-Cell processor | Sonics & Materials Inc., Newtown, CT | VC 505 / VC 750 | |
nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid Superflow resin | Qiagen Inc., Valencia, CA | 30410 | |
HiLoad 16/60 Superdex-200 column | GE Healthcare, Waukesha, WI | 28989335 | |
Vivaspin 20 filter concentrators | GE Healthcare, Waukesha, WI | 28932360 | |
Poroszyme Immobilized Pepsin Cartridge, 2.1 mm x 30 mm | Thermofischer, Sigapore | 2313100 | |
ACQUITY UPLC BEH C18 Column | Waters, Milford, MA | 186002350 | |
ACQUITY UPLC BEH C18 VanGuard Pre-column | Waters, Milford, MA | 186003975 | |
nanoAcquity HDX sample manager | Waters, Milford, MA | ||
Synapt G1 ESI mass spectrometer | Waters, Milford, MA | ||
nanoAcquity Auxillary Solvent Manager | Waters, Milford, MA | ||
nanoAcquity Binary Solvent manager | Waters, Milford, MA |
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