High-throughput computational pipeline for 3-D structure preparation and in silico protein surface property screening

A case study on HBcAg dimer structures

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

M.E. Klijn (Karlsruhe Institut für Technologie)

Philipp Vormittag (Karlsruhe Institut für Technologie)

Nicolai Bluthardt (Karlsruhe Institut für Technologie)

Jürgen Hubbuch (Karlsruhe Institut für Technologie)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2019.03.057
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Volume number
563
Pages (from-to)
337-346

Abstract

Knowledge-based experimental design can aid biopharmaceutical high-throughput screening (HTS) experiments needed to identify critical manufacturability parameters. Prior knowledge can be obtained via computational methods such as protein property extraction from 3-D protein structures. This study presents a high-throughput 3-D structure preparation and refinement pipeline that supports structure screenings with an automated and data-dependent workflow. As a case study, three chimeric virus-like particle (VLP) building blocks, hepatitis B core antigen (HBcAg) dimers, were constructed. Molecular dynamics (MD) refinement quality, speed, stability, and correlation to zeta potential data was evaluated using different MD simulation settings. Settings included 2 force fields (YASARA2 and AMBER03) and 2 pKa computation methods (YASARA and H++). MD simulations contained a data-dependent termination via identification of a 2 ns Window of Stability, which was also used for robust descriptor extraction. MD simulation with YASARA2, independent of pKa computation method, was found to be most stable and computationally efficient. These settings resulted in a fast refinement (6.6–37.5 h), a good structure quality (−1.17–−1.13) and a strong linear dependence between dimer surface charge and complete chimeric HBcAg VLP zeta potential. These results indicate the computational pipeline's applicability for early-stage candidate assessment and design optimization of HTS manufacturability or formulability experiments.

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