Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.116, No.10, 3361-3368, 2012
Cocaine Esterase-Cocaine Binding Process and the Free Energy Profiles by Molecular Dynamics and Potential of Mean Force Simulations
The combined molecular dynamics (MD) and potential of mean force (PMF) simulations have been performed to determine the free energy profiles for the binding process of (-)-cocaine interacting with wild-type cocaine esterase (CocE) and its mutants (T172R/G173Q and L119A/L169K/G173Q). According to the MD simulations, the general protein (-)-cocaine binding mode is not affected by the mutations; e.g.. the benzoyl group of (-)-cocaine is always bound in a subsite composed of aromatic residues W151, W166, F261, and F408 and hydrophobic residue L407, while the carbonyl oxygen on the benzoyl group of (-)-cocaine is hydrogen-bonded with the oxyanion-hole residues Y44 and Y118. According to the PMF-calculated free energy profiles for the binding process, the binding free energies for (-)-cocaine with the wild-type, T172R/G173Q and L119A/L169K/G173Q CocEs are predicted to be -6.4, -6.2, and -5.0 kcal/mol, respectively. The computational predictions are supported by experimental kinetic data, as the calculated binding free energies are in good agreement with the experimentally derived binding free energies, i.e., -7.2, -6.7, and -4.8 kcal/mol for the wild-type, T172R/G173Q and L119A/L169K/G173Q respectively. The reasonable agreement between the computational and experimental data suggests that the PMF simulations may be used as a valuable tool in new CocE mutant design that aims to decrease the Michaelis-Menten constant of the enzyme for (-)-cocaine.