Conformational diversity and protein–protein interfaces in drug repurposing in Ras signaling pathway

We focus on drug repurposing in the Ras signaling pathway, considering structural similarities of protein–protein interfaces. The interfaces formed by physically interacting proteins are found from PDB if available and via PRISM (PRotein Interaction by Structural Matching) otherwise. The structural...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2024-01, Vol.14 (1), p.1239-1239, Article 1239
Hauptverfasser: Sayin, Ahenk Zeynep, Abali, Zeynep, Senyuz, Simge, Cankara, Fatma, Gursoy, Attila, Keskin, Ozlem
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We focus on drug repurposing in the Ras signaling pathway, considering structural similarities of protein–protein interfaces. The interfaces formed by physically interacting proteins are found from PDB if available and via PRISM (PRotein Interaction by Structural Matching) otherwise. The structural coverage of these interactions has been increased from 21 to 92% using PRISM. Multiple conformations of each protein are used to include protein dynamics and diversity. Next, we find FDA-approved drugs bound to structurally similar protein–protein interfaces. The results suggest that HIV protease inhibitors tipranavir, indinavir, and saquinavir may bind to EGFR and ERBB3/HER3 interface. Tipranavir and indinavir may also bind to EGFR and ERBB2/HER2 interface. Additionally, a drug used in Alzheimer's disease can bind to RAF1 and BRAF interface. Hence, we propose a methodology to find drugs to be potentially used for cancer using a dataset of structurally similar protein–protein interface clusters rather than pockets in a systematic way.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-023-50913-8