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  2. Molecular mechanism of R-bicalutamide switching from androgen receptor antagonist to agonist induced by amino acid mutations using molecular dynamics simulations and free energy calculation

Molecular mechanism of R-bicalutamide switching from androgen receptor antagonist to agonist induced by amino acid mutations using molecular dynamics simulations and free energy calculation

  • J Comput Aided Mol Des. 2016 Dec;30(12):1189-1200. doi: 10.1007/s10822-016-9992-2.
Hongli Liu 1 Rui Han 1 Jiazhong Li 2 Huanxiang Liu 1 Lifang Zheng 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 School of Pharmacy, Lanzhou University, 199 West Donggang Rd., Lanzhou, 730000, China.
  • 2 School of Pharmacy, Lanzhou University, 199 West Donggang Rd., Lanzhou, 730000, China. [email protected].
Abstract

R-bicalutamide, a first generation antiandrogen, was used to treat prostate Cancer for decades. Although it is very effective at the beginning, resistance appears after 2-3 years of treatment. Mutation of Androgen Receptor (AR) is considered a main reason for drug resistance. It is reported that AR W741C, W741L, W741C_T877A, T877A, F876L, F876L_T877A and L701H mutations can convert R-bicalutamide from AR antagonist to agonist, but the switching mechanisms are not clear. In this study, molecular dynamics simulations and molecular mechanics generalized Born surface area (MM-GBSA) calculations were performed to analyze the interaction mechanisms between R-bicalutamide and wild type/mutant ARs. The results indicate that helix H12, which lies on the top of AR LBD like a cover, plays a vital role in R-bicalutamide binding. When interacting with AR, the B-ring of R-bicalutamide pushes H12 aside, distorting the coactivator binding site (AF2) resulting in the inactivation of transcription. Several residue mutations appear to enlarge the distance between the B-ring of R-bicalutamide and H12, reducing steric clash, which is conducive to a closed H12 conformation, leading to the formation of the coactivator binding site AF2 and increased transcription. Hydrogen bond and per-residue free energy decomposition analyses are also investigated to explore the interacting mechanisms, and M895 is found to be a key residue in the antagonist mechanism. The obtained molecular mechanisms will aid rational screening and design of novel AR antagonists, even to mutant AR.

Keywords

Androgen receptor antagonist; Drug-resistant mechanism; MM-GBSA; Molecular dynamics simulations; R-bicalutamide.

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