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Protein-Based Virtual Screening Tools Applied for RNA-Ligand Docking Identify New Binders of the preQ 1 -Riboswitch.

Elisabeth KallertTim R FischerSimon SchneiderMaike GrimmMark HelmChristian Kersten
Published in: Journal of chemical information and modeling (2022)
Targeting RNA with small molecules is an emerging field. While several ligands for different RNA targets are reported, structure-based virtual screenings (VSs) against RNAs are still rare. Here, we elucidated the general capabilities of protein-based docking programs to reproduce native binding modes of small-molecule RNA ligands and to discriminate known binders from decoys by the scoring function. The programs were found to perform similar compared to the RNA-based docking tool rDOCK, and the challenges faced during docking, namely, protomer and tautomer selection, target dynamics, and explicit solvent, do not largely differ from challenges in conventional protein-ligand docking. A prospective VS with the Bacillus subtilis preQ 1 -riboswitch aptamer domain performed with FRED, HYBRID, and FlexX followed by microscale thermophoresis assays identified six active compounds out of 23 tested VS hits with potencies between 29.5 nM and 11.0 μM. The hits were selected not solely based on their docking score but for resembling key interactions of the native ligand. Therefore, this study demonstrates the general feasibility to perform structure-based VSs against RNA targets, while at the same time it highlights pitfalls and their potential solutions when executing RNA-ligand docking.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • small molecule
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • nucleic acid
  • public health
  • amino acid
  • binding protein
  • high throughput
  • climate change
  • sensitive detection