6533b834fe1ef96bd129cea6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A Computational Assay of Estrogen Receptor α Antagonists Reveals the Key Common Structural Traits of Drugs Effectively Fighting Refractory Breast Cancers

Alessandra BisiNadia ZaffaroniAngelo SpinelloAlessandra MagistratoSilvia GobbiGiorgio ColomboMarzia PennatiMatic Pavlin

subject

0301 basic medicineAgonistModels MolecularBreast cancerComputational chemistryMolecular dynamicsSomatic cellmedicine.drug_classlcsh:MedicineEstrogen receptorBreast Neoplasms-Molecular Dynamics SimulationPolymorphism Single NucleotideArticleProtein Structure SecondaryEstrogen Receptor Antagonists03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBreast cancermedicineEndocrine systemHumanslcsh:ScienceMultidisciplinarybusiness.industrylcsh:REstrogen Receptor alphamedicine.diseaseEstrogen Receptor Antagonist030104 developmental biologySelective estrogen receptor modulator030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCancer researchlcsh:QFemaleEstrogen Receptor AntagonistsbusinessEstrogen receptor alphaBreast NeoplasmHuman

description

AbstractSomatic mutations of the Estrogen Receptor α (ERα) occur with an up to 40% incidence in ER sensitive breast cancer (BC) patients undergoing prolonged endocrine treatments. These polymorphisms are implicated in acquired resistance, disease relapse, and increased mortality rates, hence representing a current major clinical challenge. Here, multi-microseconds (12.5 µs) molecular dynamics simulations revealed that recurrent ERα polymorphisms (i. e. L536Q, Y537S, Y537N, D538G) (mERα) are constitutively active in their apo form and that they prompt the selection of an agonist (active)-like conformation even upon antagonists binding. Interestingly, our simulations rationalize, for the first time, the efficacy profile of (pre)clinically used Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators/Downregulators (SERMs/SERDs) against these variants, enlightening, at atomistic level of detail, the key common structural traits needed by drugs able to effectively fight refractory BC types. This knowledge represents a key advancement for mechanism-based therapeutics targeting resistant ERα isoforms, potentially allowing the community to move a step closer to ‘precision medicine’ calibrated on patients’ genetic profiles and disease progression.

10.1038/s41598-017-17364-4http://hdl.handle.net/11585/661268