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Protein Flexibility and Dissociation Pathway Differentiation Can Explain Onset of Resistance Mutations in Kinases.

Mrinal ShekharZachary SmithMarkus A SeeligerPratyush Tiwary
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Understanding how mutations render a drug ineffective is a problem of immense relevance. Often the mechanism through which mutations cause drug resistance can be explained purely through thermodynamics. However, the more perplexing situation is when two proteins have the same drug binding affinities but different residence times. In this work, we demonstrate how all-atom molecular dynamics simulations using recent developments grounded in statistical mechanics can provide a detailed mechanistic rationale for such variances. We discover dissociation mechanisms for the anti-cancer drug Imatinib (Gleevec) against wild-type and the N368S mutant of Abl kinase. We show how this point mutation triggers far-reaching changes in the protein's flexibility and leads to a different, much faster, drug dissociation pathway. We believe that this work marks an efficient and scalable approach to obtain mechanistic insight into resistance mutations in biomolecular receptors that are hard to explain using a structural perspective.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • wild type
  • electron transfer
  • adverse drug
  • clinical trial
  • tyrosine kinase
  • emergency department
  • protein protein
  • chronic myeloid leukemia
  • molecular docking
  • electronic health record