1qe2

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Theoretical Model: The protein structure described on this page was determined theoretically, and hence should be interpreted with caution.

THEORETICAL SUBSTRATE-FREE ZINC-BOUND FARNESYLTRANSFERASE GENERATED BY MOLECULAR DYNAMICS SIMULATIONSTHEORETICAL SUBSTRATE-FREE ZINC-BOUND FARNESYLTRANSFERASE GENERATED BY MOLECULAR DYNAMICS SIMULATIONS

Structural highlights

For a guided tour on the structure components use FirstGlance.
Resources:FirstGlance, PDBsum, ProSAT

Publication Abstract from PubMed

Farnesyltransferase (FT) inhibitors can suppress tumor cell proliferation without substantially interfering with normal cell growth, thus holding promise for cancer treatment. A structure-based approach to the design of improved FT inhibitors relies on knowledge of the conformational flexibility of the zinc-containing active site of FT. Although several X-ray structures of FT have been reported, detailed information regarding the active site conformational flexibility of the enzyme is still not available. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of FT can offer the requisite information, but have not been applied due to a lack of effective methods for simulating the four-ligand coordination of zinc in proteins. Here, we report in detail the problems that occurred in the conventional MD simulations of the zinc-bound FT and a solution to these problems by employing a simple method that uses cationic dummy atoms to impose orientational requirement for zinc ligands. A successful 1.0 ns (1.0 fs time step) MD simulation of zinc-bound FT suggests that nine conserved residues (Asn127alpha, Gln162alpha, Asn165alpha, Gln195alpha, His248beta, Lys294beta, Leu295beta, Lys353beta, and Ser357beta) in the active site of mammalian FT are relatively mobile. Some of these residues might be involved in the ligand-induced active site conformational rearrangement upon binding and deserve attention in screening and design of improved FT inhibitors for cancer chemotherapy.

Successful molecular dynamics simulation of the zinc-bound farnesyltransferase using the cationic dummy atom approach.,Pang YP, Xu K, Yazal JE, Prendergas FG Protein Sci. 2000 Oct;9(10):1857-65. PMID:11106157[1]

From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

References

  1. Pang YP, Xu K, Yazal JE, Prendergas FG. Successful molecular dynamics simulation of the zinc-bound farnesyltransferase using the cationic dummy atom approach. Protein Sci. 2000 Oct;9(10):1857-65. PMID:11106157
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