Preferential Door for Ligand Binding and Unbinding Pathways in Inhibited Human Acetylcholinesterase.
Nalinee KongkaewKowit HengphasatpornYasuteru ShigetaThanyada RungrotmongkolRyuhei HaradaPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2024)
Rising global population and increased food demands have resulted in the increased use of organophosphate pesticides (OPs), leading to toxin accumulation and transmission to humans. Pralidoxime (2-PAM), an FDA-approved drug, serves as an antidote for OP therapy. However, the atomic-level detoxification mechanisms regarding the design of novel antidotes remain unclear. This is the first study to examine the binding and unbinding pathways of 2-PAM to human acetylcholinesterase (HuAChE) through three identified doors using an enhanced sampling method called ligand-binding parallel cascade selection molecular dynamics (LB-PaCS-MD). Remarkably, LB-PaCS-MD could identify a predominant in-line binding mechanism through the acyl door at 63.79% ± 6.83%, also implicating it in a potential unbinding route (90.14% ± 4.22%). Interestingly, crucial conformational shifts in key residues, W86, Y341, and Y449, and the Ω loop significantly affect door dynamics and ligand binding modes. The LB-PaCS-MD technique can study ligand-binding pathways, thereby contributing to the design of antidotes and covalent drugs.