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Crystal Packing Reveals a Potential Autoinhibited KRAS Dimer Interface and a Strategy for Small-Molecule Inhibition of RAS Signaling.

Robert J BrennerAlexander D LandgrafKhuchtumur Bum-ErdeneGiovanni Gonzalez-GutierrezSamy O Meroueh
Published in: Biochemistry (2023)
KRAS GTPases harbor oncogenic mutations in more than 25% of human tumors. KRAS is considered to be largely undruggable due to the lack of a suitable small-molecule binding site. Here, we report a unique crystal structure of His-tagged KRAS G12D that reveals a remarkable conformational change. The Switch I loop of one His-KRAS G12D structure extends into the Switch I/II pocket of another His-KRAS G12D in an adjacent unit cell to create an elaborate interface that is reminiscent of high-affinity protein-protein complexes. We explore the contributions of amino acids at this interface using alanine-scanning studies with alchemical free energy perturbation calculations based on explicit-solvent molecular dynamics simulations. Several interface amino acids were found to be hot spots as they contributed more than 1.5 kcal/mol to the protein-protein interaction. Computational analysis of the complex revealed the presence of two large binding pockets that possess physicochemical features typically found in pockets considered druggable. Small-molecule binding to these pockets may stabilize this autoinhibited structure of KRAS if it exists in cells to provide a new strategy to inhibit RAS signaling.
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