2. Materials and Methods
Figure 3.
Overview of the integrated computational strategy employed in this study. The workflow illustrates the sequential and convergent application of similarity-based screening, molecular docking, residue-level interaction analysis, scaffold hopping, bioisosteric replacement, and pharmacophore-based validation. Independent validation paths converge on the final optimized analogue, supporting the internal consistency and robustness of the design strategy.
Figure 3.
Overview of the integrated computational strategy employed in this study. The workflow illustrates the sequential and convergent application of similarity-based screening, molecular docking, residue-level interaction analysis, scaffold hopping, bioisosteric replacement, and pharmacophore-based validation. Independent validation paths converge on the final optimized analogue, supporting the internal consistency and robustness of the design strategy.
2.1. Selection of the Reference Drug and Rationale
The study began with a systematic evaluation of clinically relevant anti-MRSA agents reported to interact with penicillin-binding protein 2a (PBP2a). Structural investigations have demonstrated that PBP2a contains a ligand-responsive allosteric pocket located approximately 60 Å from the catalytic serine, whose occupancy induces conformational rearrangements required for enzymatic activation (Otero et al., 2013). This regulatory pocket is defined by a compact cluster of residues centered on Asp516, Tyr519, and Gln521, which together form a hydrogen-bonding and aromatic interaction network essential for long-range allosteric signal propagation.
Although several β-lactam antibiotics have been reported to transiently access this regulatory region, none have been shown to stably occupy or functionally stabilize the pocket. Among clinically used agents, ceftaroline is unique in that its anti-MRSA activity has been linked to allosteric modulation of PBP2a rather than direct catalytic inhibition. However, more recent structural studies indicate that ceftaroline fails to establish persistent interactions with key regulatory residues such as Asp516 and Gln521, resulting in incomplete stabilization of the allosteric site (Luthra and Mobashery, 2023).
Based on this evidence, ceftaroline was selected as the reference scaffold for subsequent computational analysis. To support this choice quantitatively, a SwissSimilarity search was performed using ceftaroline as the query molecule. Compounds with similarity scores ≥ 0.50 were retained, producing the top five structurally related candidates.
These compounds, together with ceftaroline, were subsequently subjected to molecular docking against PBP2a under identical experimental conditions to establish a comparative performance baseline and to evaluate interaction patterns within the regulatory pocket. Interaction mapping demonstrated that, despite relatively favorable docking scores, ceftaroline and related β-lactam derivatives failed to form stable interactions with the Asp516–Tyr519–Gln521 residue network, supporting the need for scaffold redesign
Figure 4.
Three-dimensional representation of the PBP2a regulatory pocket showing the spatial arrangement of Asp516, Tyr519, and Gln521. The pocket exhibits a mixed polar–aromatic topology with defined geometric constraints, suggesting that effective ligands must combine directional hydrogen bonding with aromatic complementarity to achieve stable engagement.
Figure 4.
Three-dimensional representation of the PBP2a regulatory pocket showing the spatial arrangement of Asp516, Tyr519, and Gln521. The pocket exhibits a mixed polar–aromatic topology with defined geometric constraints, suggesting that effective ligands must combine directional hydrogen bonding with aromatic complementarity to achieve stable engagement.
2.2. Initial Docking and Interaction Failure Analysis
Molecular docking of the selected compounds was performed to evaluate their interaction potential with the PBP2a allosteric regulatory pocket. Docking simulations were conducted using PyRx, which integrates the AutoDock docking engine to predict ligand–protein binding conformations and estimate binding affinities. The docking results indicated that ceftaroline produced the highest docking score among the similarity-derived candidates, confirming its status as the most optimized scaffold within the β-lactam class evaluated in this study.
However, despite this favorable docking score, subsequent interaction analysis demonstrated that ceftaroline failed to establish stable or persistent interactions with key regulatory residues located within the PBP2a allosteric pocket.
To investigate this observation in greater detail, the docked complexes generated in PyRx were exported and analyzed using BIOVIA Discovery Studio Visualizer for residue-level interaction profiling and three-dimensional binding visualization. Interaction mapping revealed weak or absent hydrogen bonding with residues implicated in allosteric signal transmission, particularly Asp516 and Gln521, which form part of the regulatory network responsible for transmitting conformational changes across the PBP2a enzyme.
The observed interaction profile is consistent with structural reports suggesting that ceftaroline primarily relies on transient conformational engagement rather than stable regulatory-site stabilization, limiting its ability to effectively maintain the inactive configuration of PBP2a (Pinho et al., 2023; Zhang and Fisher, 2024).
To further verify this limitation, a focused redocking analysis was conducted in PyRx followed by detailed residue-level interaction visualization in Discovery Studio Visualizer. The analysis confirmed that ceftaroline interactions remained largely peripheral to the deep regulatory pocket and did not extend sufficiently to engage the Asp516–Gln521 interaction network. These findings therefore highlighted a structural limitation in the scaffold, providing the rationale for subsequent scaffold modification and ligand optimization.
Figure 5.
Docking pose of ceftaroline within the PBP2a regulatory pocket.seen in a and b shows The ligand exhibits relatively low binding affinity and appears to adopt a conformation with limited penetration into the binding region. Visual inspection of the docking pose suggests suboptimal alignment with residues such as Asp516, Tyr519, and Gln521, which may be positioned to support stabilizing polar and aromatic interactions. The absence of consistent contacts within this region could contribute to reduced interaction stability. These observations may indicate that the structural features of the β-lactam scaffold are not well suited for effective accommodation within this pocket, supporting the exploration of alternative scaffolds with improved conformational adaptability.
Figure 5.
Docking pose of ceftaroline within the PBP2a regulatory pocket.seen in a and b shows The ligand exhibits relatively low binding affinity and appears to adopt a conformation with limited penetration into the binding region. Visual inspection of the docking pose suggests suboptimal alignment with residues such as Asp516, Tyr519, and Gln521, which may be positioned to support stabilizing polar and aromatic interactions. The absence of consistent contacts within this region could contribute to reduced interaction stability. These observations may indicate that the structural features of the β-lactam scaffold are not well suited for effective accommodation within this pocket, supporting the exploration of alternative scaffolds with improved conformational adaptability.
2.3. Analysis of Amino Acid Environment and Targetable Changes
Following confirmation of ceftaroline’s limitations during docking analysis, a detailed examination of the PBP2a regulatory binding environment was performed. The docked complexes generated in PyRx were imported into BIOVIA Discovery Studio Visualizer for residue-level interaction analysis and spatial evaluation of the binding pocket. Particular attention was directed toward residues whose spatial orientation or physicochemical properties could restrict productive interaction with β-lactam scaffolds.
This analysis identified Asp516, Tyr519, and Gln521 as key residues within the regulatory pocket. The spatial arrangement of these residues suggested a binding environment that favors ligands capable of deeper pocket penetration, extended hydrogen-bond geometry, and aromatic stacking interactions, features that are poorly accommodated by the rigid cephem β-lactam core of ceftaroline. In particular, the orientation of Tyr519 indicated the potential for π–π interactions with aromatic systems, while Asp516 and Gln521 appeared positioned to support extended hydrogen-bond networks.
The residue-level insights obtained from this structural analysis provided the mechanistic basis for rational ligand redesign, prompting a strategic shift from incremental β-lactam optimization toward complete scaffold replacement.
2.4. Scaffold Hopping Strategy, Bioisosteric Replacement and Chemical Modifications
To overcome the structural rigidity and enzymatic vulnerability associated with the β-lactam core, a scaffold hopping strategy was implemented. Scaffold hopping is a medicinal chemistry approach in which the central molecular framework of a compound is replaced with an alternative core while maintaining the spatial orientation of key pharmacophoric elements.
In the first design iteration (Analogue 1), the cephem β-lactam ring of ceftaroline was replaced with a planar aromatic benzene scaffold. This transformation preserved the approximate spatial positioning of substituent groups while eliminating the strained β-lactam ring system responsible for β-lactamase susceptibility and conformational rigidity.
Figure 6.
Ring system based scaffold hopping involving simplification of a fused β-lactam (cephem) core to a monocyclic aromatic scaffold The transformation represents a ring system based scaffold hopping strategy, where the rigid cephem β-lactam core was simplified into a monocyclic aromatic scaffold. This structural reduction preserves key spatial features while enhancing conformational adaptability and minimizing susceptibility to β-lactamase-mediated degradation.
Figure 6.
Ring system based scaffold hopping involving simplification of a fused β-lactam (cephem) core to a monocyclic aromatic scaffold The transformation represents a ring system based scaffold hopping strategy, where the rigid cephem β-lactam core was simplified into a monocyclic aromatic scaffold. This structural reduction preserves key spatial features while enhancing conformational adaptability and minimizing susceptibility to β-lactamase-mediated degradation.
Illustration of the scaffold transformation strategy applied to ceftaroline. The parent structure (top) highlights the β-lactam region (red), which is modified through a scaffold simplification process. This transformation involves removal of the β-lactam-containing cephem core and its conceptual replacement with a simpler aromatic scaffold (center), as represented by the benzene ring. The resulting analogue (bottom) incorporates the simplified aromatic moiety (red), suggesting a shift toward a less rigid and more adaptable structural framework. This design approach appears to retain key structural features while reducing complexity, which may influence interaction behavior within the targeted binding region.
2.5. Bioisosteric Replacement and Chemical Modifications
Further optimization of the redesigned scaffold was performed through targeted bioisosteric replacement, a strategy that continues to play a central role in modern medicinal chemistry for modulating electronic properties and hydrogen-bonding behavior while preserving overall molecular topology (Boström et al., 2023; Meanwell, 2024 review update). In this step, structural modifications were introduced to improve the ligand’s compatibility with the hydrogen-bonding environment identified within the PBP2a regulatory pocket, consistent with recent structural studies highlighting the importance of allosteric site interactions in modulating PBP2a function (Liu et al., 2023; Fisher & Mobashery, 2024).
In Analogue 2, a sulfur atom located within the linker region of Analogue 1 was replaced with an oxygen atom, representing a heteroatom bioisosteric substitution known to influence electronic distribution, polarity, and hydrogen-bonding capacity (Boström et al., 2023; Zhang et al., 2024). Such substitutions have been shown in recent studies to enhance hydrogen-bond directionality and interaction specificity in protein–ligand systems (Zhang et al., 2024). This modification was therefore intended to improve potential interactions with polar residues within the regulatory pocket while maintaining the spatial orientation established during the scaffold-hopping stage (Fisher & Mobashery, 2024).
Docking simulations for the modified analogue were performed using PyRx, followed by export of binding conformations to BIOVIA Discovery Studio Visualizer for residue-level interaction analysis and three-dimensional visualization, consistent with current computational drug discovery workflows (Dallakyan & Olson; updated applications in Patel et al., 2023). As illustrated in
Figure 4, the oxygen substitution was associated with the formation of more directional hydrogen-bond interactions with residues Asp516 and Gln521, with a corresponding reduction in ligand–residue interaction distances and improved geometric alignment within the regulatory pocket, consistent with recent findings emphasizing the role of polar residue engagement in stabilizing allosteric binding interactions (Liu et al., 2023).
These interaction features were accompanied by improved docking performance, with Analogue 2 showing the most favorable binding affinity and increased interaction density among the designed compounds. While docking scores alone do not confirm biological activity, recent evaluations continue to support their use as comparative indicators of binding complementarity and prioritization in early-stage drug design (Pinzi & Rastelli, 2023; Santos et al., 2024). The combined application of scaffold hopping and bioisosteric replacement therefore appears to yield a ligand architecture more compatible with the Asp516–Gln521 interaction region, which may contribute to improved stabilization of the PBP2a allosteric site (Fisher & Mobashery, 2024; Liu et al., 2023)
Figure 7.
Binding mode of Analogue 2 within the PBP2a regulatory pocket, showing hydrogen-bond interactions with Asp516 and Gln521 and improved pocket penetration relative to the reference scaffold. Two-dimensional interaction map of Analogue 2 highlighting hydrogen-bonding, aromatic, and hydrophobic contacts within the PBP2a regulatory pocket. The ligand uniquely engages Asp516, Tyr519, and Gln521 simultaneously, forming an interaction network consistent with enhanced regulatory-site stabilization.
Figure 7.
Binding mode of Analogue 2 within the PBP2a regulatory pocket, showing hydrogen-bond interactions with Asp516 and Gln521 and improved pocket penetration relative to the reference scaffold. Two-dimensional interaction map of Analogue 2 highlighting hydrogen-bonding, aromatic, and hydrophobic contacts within the PBP2a regulatory pocket. The ligand uniquely engages Asp516, Tyr519, and Gln521 simultaneously, forming an interaction network consistent with enhanced regulatory-site stabilization.
Table 2.
Molecular docking results of the reference ligand (ceftaroline) and designed analogues against PBP2a. Binding affinities are expressed in kcal/mol, providing a comparative assessment of ligand–protein interaction strength and supporting the selection of optimized candidates.
Table 2.
Molecular docking results of the reference ligand (ceftaroline) and designed analogues against PBP2a. Binding affinities are expressed in kcal/mol, providing a comparative assessment of ligand–protein interaction strength and supporting the selection of optimized candidates.
| Ligand |
Binding Affinity |
rmsd/ub |
rmsd/lb |
| CEFTAROLINE_Docking pose 1 |
-7.9 |
0 |
0 |
| Folo drug analouge 1 _ pose 1 |
-8.2 |
0 |
0 |
| Folo drug analouge 2 _ pose 1 |
-8.4 |
0 |
0 |
| Folo drug analouge 3 _ pose 1 |
-6.9 |
0 |
0 |
Table 3.
Summary of ligand protein interactions observed during docking analysis. The table highlights key interaction involved in stabilizing interactions, including hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic contacts, for the optimized ligands.
Table 3.
Summary of ligand protein interactions observed during docking analysis. The table highlights key interaction involved in stabilizing interactions, including hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic contacts, for the optimized ligands.
| Interaction Type |
Analogue 1 |
Analogue 2 |
Analogue 3 |
| π–π stacking |
1 present |
1 present |
1 present |
| Hydrogen bonding |
1 present |
3 present |
2 present |
| Salt bridge |
Absent |
1 present |
1 present |
| Electrostatic attraction |
Minor clash |
1 present |
1 present |
| Peripheral residue contact |
Limited |
Extensive |
Extensive |
Bioisosteric replacement was applied to refine the newly introduced scaffolds. Specific substitutions were made at positions corresponding to ceftaroline’s side chains that previously failed to engage regulatory residues. Polar functional groups were replaced with bioisosteres capable of improved hydrogen-bond directionality toward Asp516 and Gln521, while bulky substituents were streamlined to reduce steric hindrance.
These modifications resulted in three novel compounds, designated 1, 2, and 3, each representing a distinct balance of polarity, rigidity, and aromatic character. The chemical changes were intentionally localized to regions interacting with the regulatory pocket to ensure mechanistic relevance and reproducibility.
2.6. Pharmacophore-Based Validation
To provide an independent line of validation beyond structure-based docking, a ligand-based pharmacophore approach was employed to assess whether the designed novel analogues recapitulate key interaction features associated with effective engagement of the PBP2a regulatory pocket. Pharmacophore modeling was selected specifically to test whether the observed docking improvements reflected genuine alignment with known functional interaction patterns rather than favorable scoring artifacts.
A reference pharmacophore model was constructed using reported small-molecule ligands and chemically characterized PBP2a binders described in the literature to interact with regulatory or allosteric regions of the enzyme. These ligands were chosen based on documented andmechanistically inferred engagement of non-catalytic PBP2a sites implicated in allosteric signal transmission. Rather than relying on global structural similarity, the ligands were aligned according to shared interaction features to capture conserved functional motifs relevant to regulatory-site binding.
The resulting pharmacophore model comprised spatially constrained hydrogen-bond acceptor and donor features, aromatic ring features, and hydrophobic centroids corresponding to the physicochemical environment of the deep regulatory pocket. Particular emphasis was placed on features oriented toward the Asp516–Tyr519–Gln521 region, which has been implicated in stabilizing allosteric conformational changes within PBP2a. Feature tolerances were optimized to allow modest conformational variability while preserving discriminatory power, thereby reducing the risk of overfitting.
This pharmacophore model was subsequently used to screen both the SwissSimilarity-derived compounds and the newly designed FOLO ligands under identical screening parameters. Notably, multiple SwissSimilarity-derived compounds were recovered among the top-ranked pharmacophore hits, demonstrating strong agreement between similarity-based chemical space exploration and feature-based functional recognition. This convergence supports the internal consistency of the computational workflow and confirms that the similarity search captured ligands occupying relevant pharmacophoric space rather than producing coincidental structural matches.
Among the designed compounds, 2 achieved the highest pharmacophore fitness score, aligning with all essential features of the model. This finding independently corroborates the docking and interaction analyses, indicating that the scaffold hopping and bioisosteric modifications introduced in 2 successfully preserved and enhanced the spatial and electronic features required for effective engagement of the PBP2a regulatory pocket. Importantly, 2 was not included in the construction of the pharmacophore model, reducing the likelihood of methodological bias and strengthening the validity of the result.
Taken together, the pharmacophore-based screening provides orthogonal validation of the rational design strategy employed in this study. The agreement between docking, residue-level interaction analysis, similarity screening, and pharmacophore fitness supports the conclusion that the observed improvements in 2 arise from meaningful ligand–target complementarity rather than dependence on a single computational method.