Differential Stabilities of Mefloquine-Bound Human and Plasmodium falciparum Acyl-CoA-Binding Proteins

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

ACS Omega

Abstract

Toxic effects of pharmacological drugs restrict their robust application against human diseases. Although used as a drug in the combinatorial therapy to treat malaria, the use of mefloquine is not highly recommended because of its adverse effects in humans. Mefloquine inhibits the binding of acyl-CoAs to acyl-CoA-binding proteins of Plasmodium falciparum (PfACBPs) and human (hACBP). In this study, we have used molecular dynamics simulation and other computational approaches to investigate the differences of stabilities of mefloquine-PfACBP749 and mefloquine-hACBP complexes. The stability of mefloquine in the binding cavity of PfACBP749 is less than its stability in the binding pocket of hACBP. Although the essential tyrosine residues (tyrosine-30 and tyrosine-33 of PfACBP749 and tyrosine-29 and tyrosine-32 of hACBP) mediate the initial binding of mefloquine to the proteins by π-stacking interactions, additional temporally longer interactions between mefloquine and aspartate-22 and methionine-25 of hACBP result in stronger binding of mefloquine to hACBP. The higher fluctuation of mefloquine-binding residues of PfACBP749 contributes to the instability of mefloquine in the binding cavity of the protein. On the contrary, in the mefloquine-bound state, the stability of hACBP protein is less than the stability of PfACBP749. The helix-to-coil transition of the N-terminal hydrophobic region of hACBP has a destabilizing effect upon the protein's structure. This causes the induction of aggregation properties in the hACBP in the mefloquine-bound state. Taken together, we describe the mechanistic features that affect the differential dynamic stabilities of mefloquine-bound PfACBP749 and hACBP proteins.

First Page

1883

Last Page

1893

DOI

10.1021/acsomega.0c04582

Publication Date

1-26-2021

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS