Free energy profile of permeation of Entecavir through Hepatitis B virus capsid studied by molecular dynamics calculation
Author:
Fujimoto Kazushi1, Fukai Motohiro1, Urano Ryo1, Shinoda Wataru1, Ishikawa Tetsuya2, Omagari Katsumi3, Tanaka Yasuhito3, Nakagawa Atsushi4, Okazaki Susumu1
Affiliation:
1. Department of Materials Chemistry , Nagoya University , Nagoya , Japan 2. Department of Radiological and Medical Laboratory Sciences , Nagoya University , Nagoya , Japan 3. Department of Virology and Liver Unit , Nagoya City University , Nagoya , Japan 4. Institute for Protein Research , Osaka University , Suita , Japan
Abstract
Abstract
Entecavir, triphosphorylated in liver cells, is an antiviral reagent against Hepatitis B virus (HBV). The reagent inhibits reverse transcription of RNA inside the virus capsid. In the present study, free energy profile of an Entecavir triphosphate (ETVTP) molecule has been calculated when it passes through pores of the capsid along two- and three-fold rotational symmetry axes in order to investigate permeation pathway of the reagent to the inside of the capsid. The calculations have been done based on thermodynamic integration (TI) method combined with all-atomistic molecular dynamic (MD) calculations. A free energy minimum of −19 kJ/mol was found at the entrance of the pore from the outside along the three-fold symmetry axis. This stabilization is from the interaction of negatively charged ETVTP with positively charged capsid methionine residues. This excess free energy concentrates of the reagent at the entrance of the pore by a factor of about 2000. A free energy barrier of approximately 13 kJ/mol was also found near the exit of the pore to the inside of the capsid due to narrow space of the pore surrounded by hydrophobic wall made by proline residues and negatively charged wall by aspartic acid residues. There, ETVTP is partially dehydrated in order to pass through the narrow space, which causes the great free energy loss. Further, the negatively charged residues produce repulsive forces on the ETVTP molecule. In contrast, in the case of the pore along the two-fold symmetry axis, the calculated free energy profile showed shallower free energy minimum, −4 kJ/mol at the entrance in spite of the similarly high barrier, 7 kJ/mol, near the exit of the pore.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
General Chemical Engineering,General Chemistry
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