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The human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) protease is an important target for treating HIV infection. Our goal was to benchmark a novel molecular docking protocol and determine its effectiveness as a therapeutic repurposing tool by predicting inhibitor potency to this target. To accomplish this, we predicted the relative binding scores of various inhibitors of the protease using CANDOCK, a hierarchical fragment-based docking protocol with a knowledge-based scoring function. We first used a set of 30 HIV-1 protease complexes as an initial benchmark to optimize the parameters for CANDOCK. We then compared the results from CANDOCK to two other popular molecular docking protocols Autodock Vina and Smina. Our results showed that CANDOCK is superior to both of these protocols in terms of correlating predicted binding scores to experimental binding affinities with a Pearson coefficient of 0.62 compared to 0.48 and 0.49 for Vina and Smina, respectively. We further leveraged the Database of Useful Decoys: Enhanced (DUD-E) HIV protease set to ascertain the effectiveness of each protocol in discriminating active versus decoy ligands for proteases. CANDOCK again displayed better efficacy over the other commonly used molecular docking protocols with area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) of 0.94 compared to 0.71 and 0.74 for Vina and Smina. These findings support the utility of CANDOCK to help discover novel therapeutics that effectively inhibit HIV-1 and possibly other retroviral proteases.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2021.775513 | DOI Listing |
HIV-1 particle assembly depends critically on multiple proteolytic cleavages of viral polyproteins by the viral protease, PR. PR is translated as part of the Gag-Pro-Pol polyprotein, which undergoes autoproteolysis to liberate active, dimeric PR during virus particle maturation. Gag-Pro-Pol is produced via an infrequent -1 frameshifting event in ribosomes translating full length genomic RNA as Gag mRNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNPJ Drug Discov
September 2025
Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT USA.
A strategy to functionally cure AIDS by eliminating latent HIV-1 reservoirs involves non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) that promote pyroptosis of HIV-1 infected cells. These NNRTIs stimulate dimerization of the Gag-Pol polyprotein, resulting in premature HIV-1 protease (PR) dimerization and cleavage of intracellular CARD8. A unique cell-based high-throughput screen was developed to identify potent compounds activating the CARD8 inflammasome through Gag-Pol dimerization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
August 2025
Center for Biophysics and Quantitative Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, 61801, USA.
Understanding conformational dynamics is essential for elucidating protein function, yet most deep learning models in structural biology predict only static structures. Here, we introduce ESMDynamic, a deep learning model that predicts dynamic residue-residue contact probability maps directly from protein sequence. Built on the ESMFold architecture, ESMDynamic is trained on contact fluctuations from experimental structure ensembles and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, enabling it to capture diverse modes of structural variability without requiring multiple sequence alignments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFViruses
July 2025
Protein Structure-Function Research Laboratory, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg 2000, South Africa.
The HIV-1 aspartic protease is an effective target for the treatment of HIV/AIDS. Current therapy utilizes a selection of nine protease inhibitors (PIs) in combination with other classes of antiretroviral drugs. Although PIs were originally developed based on the knowledge of the HIV-1 subtype B protease, the existence of other HIV-1 subtypes and the effects of drug resistance on currently available PIs have become a major challenge in the treatment of HIV/AIDS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioorg Med Chem
November 2025
Institute of Medicinal Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Medical Science and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China. Electronic address:
A series of novel potent HIV-1 protease inhibitors featuring diverse hydroxyaromatic acetanilide derivatives as P2 ligands and 4-substituted phenyl sulfonamides as P2' ligands were designed, synthesized, and biologically evaluated. The majority of the target compounds demonstrated potent enzyme inhibitory activity with IC values below100 nM. Notably, compound 18h, incorporating a 2-(4-hydroxypyrimidin-5-yl) acetamide P2 ligand and a 4-methoxybenzenesulfonamide as the P2' ligand, exhibited exceptional potency with an enzyme IC of 0.
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