Molecular Dynamics Reveals Altered Interactions between Belzutifan and HIF-2 with Natural Variant G323E or Proximal Phosphorylation at T324.
Vishva NatarajanVardhan SatalkarJames C GumbartMatthew P TorresPublished in: ACS omega (2024)
In patients with von-Hippel Lindau (VHL) disease, hypoxia-independent accumulation of HIF-2α leads to increased transcriptional activity of HIF-2α:ARNT that drives cancers such as renal cell carcinoma. Belzutifan, a recently FDA-approved drug, is designed to prevent the transcriptional activity of HIF-2α:ARNT, thereby overcoming the consequences of its unnatural accumulation in VHL-dependent cancers. Emerging evidence suggests that the naturally occurring variant G323E located in the HIF-2α drug binding pocket prevents inhibitory activity of belzutifan analogs, though the mechanism of inhibition remains unclear. Interestingly, proximal phosphorylation at neighboring T324, previously shown to regulate HIF-2 protein interactions, has also been proposed to affect HIF-2 drug binding. Here, we used molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to understand and compare the molecular-level effects of G323E and phospho-T324 (pT324) on the belzutifan bound-HIF-2α:ARNT complex. We find that both G323E and pT324 increase structural flexibility within the drug binding site and reduce the apparent binding affinity for belzutifan. Whereas the effects of G323E are concentrated in the binding pocket Fα helix within the HIF-2α PAS-B domain, pT324 decreased the belzutifan binding affinity and stabilized the HIF-2 heterodimer through an alternate mechanism involving polar interactions between the HIF-2α PAS-B and PAS-A domains. Further analysis via ensemble machine learning uncovered important and distinct interchain residue interactions modified by G323E and pT324. These findings reveal a molecular mechanism of G323E-induced drug resistance and suggest that pT324 may also affect the efficacy of HIF-2 drug binding interactions via allosteric effects.