insights into subtype selectivity of aurora kinase ligands from molecular dynamics simulation
abstract
aurora kinases are phosphotransferase enzymes that play essential roles in cell division. there
are three members of aurora kinases in mammalian cells: aurora a, aurora b and aurora c. the
overexpression of aurora kinases in diverse cancer cells make them promising targets in cancer
therapy. aurora kinases show highly conserved homology, having four different residues in the
active site: leu215, thr217, val218, and arg220 in aurora a (arg159, glu161, leu162 and
lys164 in aurora b). therefore, understanding aurora kinase inhibitor selectivity remains a top
priority for kinase inhibitor design.
the utilization of molecular dynamics simulations for kinase selectivity studies could provide
insights into ligand-protein interactions, including key residues, predominant free energy
contributions, and interaction types, facilitating the design of subtype-selective inhibitors. to
elucidate the subtype selectivity mechanism of aurora kinase a and b, molecular docking was
employed to construct complex structures. subsequent md simulations were conducted for
complexes of aurora a and b with selective inhibitors ly3295668, mk-5108, and alisertib, as
well as aurora b selective inhibitor gsk-1070916 and pan-inhibitor danusertib. the analysis
included rmsd, average structure determination, mm/pbsa-derived binding free energy, and
decomposition analysis, elucidating favorable or unfavorable residue contributions within the
active site. for aurora a selective inhibitors (ly3295668, mk-5108, and alisertib), the residue
thr217 and arg220/137 emerged as crucial for selectivity, with the carboxylate group being the
predominant functional group contributing significantly to binding free energy in these
compounds. conversely, gsk-1070916's selectivity for aurora b was attributed to arg159 and
asp218, with its tertiary amine with methyl group being key functional groups. these findings
on subtype selectivity mechanisms hold promise for the development of highly selective aurora
kinase inhibitors, offering a less toxic anti-cancer strategy.