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Elsevier, Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry, 1(18), p. 320-329

DOI: 10.1016/j.bmc.2009.10.052

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In silico prediction of human carboxylesterase-1 (hCES1) metabolism combining docking analyses and MD simulations

Journal article published in 2009 by Giulio Vistoli ORCID, Alessandro Pedretti, Angelica Mazzolari, Bernard Testa
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Metabolic problems lead to numerous failures during clinical trials, and much effort is now devoted in developing in silico models predicting metabolic stability and metabolites. Such models are well known for cytochromes P450 and some transferases, whereas little has been done to predict the hydrolytic activity of human hydrolases. The present study was undertaken to develop a computational approach able to predict the hydrolysis of novel esters by human carboxylesterase hCES1. The study involves both docking analyses of known substrates to develop predictive models, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to reveal the in situ behavior of substrates and products, with particular attention being paid to the influence of their ionization state. The results emphasize some crucial properties of the hCES1 catalytic cavity, confirming that as a trend with several exceptions, hCES1 prefers substrates with relatively smaller and somewhat polar alkyl/aryl groups and larger hydrophobic acyl moieties. The docking results underline the usefulness of the hydrophobic interaction score proposed here, which allows a robust prediction of hCES1 catalysis, while the MD simulations show the different behavior of substrates and products in the enzyme cavity, suggesting in particular that basic substrates interact with the enzyme in their unprotonated form.