N-substituting perturbation on the interaction affinity and recognition specificity between rheumatic immune-related Abl SH3 domain and its peptoid ligands

Xiaomin Tang, Jingjin Chen, Jiahui Cai,Qiuqin Wang

Journal of molecular graphics & modelling(2023)

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Abstract
Abl is a nonreceptor tyrosine kinase involved in a variety of disease pathways such as rheumatic immune. Full-length Abl protein consists of a catalytic tyrosine kinase (TK) domain as well as two regulatory Src homology domains 2 and 3 (SH2 and SH3, respectively); the latter recognizes and binds to those natural proline-rich peptide segments containing a PxxP motif on the protein surface of its interacting partners. However, natural peptides cannot bind effectively to the modular domain in high affinity and strong selectivity due to their small size and broad specificity. Here, a synthetic proline-rich peptide p41 was used as template; its structural diversity was extended by combinationally replacing the Pro0 and Pro+3 residues with a number of N-substituted amino acids. Consequently, peptide affinity change upon the replacement was derived to create a systematic N-substituting perturbation profile, from which we identified several N-substitution combinations at the Pro0 and Pro+3 residues of p41 PxxP motif that may moderately or significantly improve the peptide binding potency to Abl; they represent potent peptoid binders of Abl SH3 domain, with affinity improved considerably relative to p41. More significantly, the designed potent peptoids were also found to exhibit a good SH3-selectivity for their cognate Abl over other noncognate nonreceptor tyrosine kinases, with S = 9.7-fold.
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Key words
Abl,SH3,PxxP,Peptide,Peptoid,N-substituted amino acid,Rheumatic immune
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