Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Oct 2022)

Molecular dynamics identifies semi-rigid domains in the PD-1 checkpoint receptor bound to its natural ligand PD-L1

  • Michael Kenn,
  • Rudolf Karch,
  • Lisa Tomasiak,
  • Michael Cibena,
  • Georg Pfeiler,
  • Heinz Koelbl,
  • Wolfgang Schreiner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2022.838129
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Cells in danger of being erroneously attacked by leucocytes express PD-L1 on their surface. These cells activate PD-1 on attacking leucocytes and send them to death, thus curbing erroneous, autoimmune attack. Unfortunately, cancer cells exploit this mechanism: By expressing PD-L1, they guard themselves against leucocyte attack and thereby evade immune clearance. Checkpoint inhibitors are drugs which re-enable immune clearance of cancer cells by blocking the binding of PD-L1 to PD-1 receptors. It is therefore of utmost interest to investigate these binding mechanisms. We use three 600 ns all-atom molecular dynamics simulations to scrutinize molecular motions of PD-1 with its binding partner, the natural ligand PD-L1. Usually, atomic motion patterns are evaluated against whole molecules as a reference, disregarding that such a reference is a dynamic entity by itself, thus degrading stability of the reference. As a remedy, we identify semi-rigid domains, lending themselves as more stable and reliable reference frames against which even minute differences in molecular motion can be quantified precisely. We propose an unsupervised three-step procedure. In previous work of our group and others, minute differences in motion patterns proved decisive for differences in function. Here, several highly reliable frames of reference are established for future investigations based on molecular motion.

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