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Rapid in silico Design of Potential Cyclic Peptide Binders Targeting Protein-Protein Interfaces

Brianda L. Santini, Martin Zacharias

2020Frontiers in Chemistry30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rational design of specific inhibitors of protein-protein interactions is desirable for drug design to control cellular signal transduction but also for studying protein-protein interaction networks. We have developed a rapid computational approach to rationally design cyclic peptides that potentially bind at desired regions of the interface of protein-protein complexes. The methodology is based on comparing the protein backbone structure of short peptide segments (epitopes) at the protein-protein interface with a collection of cyclic peptide backbone structures. A cyclic peptide that matches the backbone structure of the segment is used as a template for a binder by adapting the amino acid side chains to the side chains found in the target complex. For a small library of cyclic peptides with known high resolution structures we found for the majority (~82%) of 154 protein-protein complexes at least one very well fitting match for a cyclic peptide template to a protein-protein interface segment. The majority of the constructed protein-cyclic peptide complexes was very stable during Molecular Dynamics simulations and showed an interaction energy score that was typically more favorable compared to interaction scores of typical peptide-protein complexes. Our cPEPmatch approach could be a promising approach for rapid suggestion of cyclic peptide binders that could be tested experimentally and further improved by chemical modification.

Topics & Concepts

PeptideCyclic peptideIn silicoProtein–protein interactionRational designProtein structureChemistrySide chainPeptide sequenceProtein designBiophysicsCombinatorial chemistryBiochemistryBiologyMaterials scienceNanotechnologyPolymerGeneOrganic chemistryChemical Synthesis and AnalysisMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchBiochemical and Structural Characterization
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