AI-ACCELERATED DRUG DISCOVERY

Ribonuclease H2 subunit C

Explore its Potential with AI-Driven Innovation
Predicted by Alphafold

Ribonuclease H2 subunit C - Focused Library Design

Available from Reaxense

This protein is integrated into the Receptor.AI ecosystem as a prospective target with high therapeutic potential. We performed a comprehensive characterization of Ribonuclease H2 subunit C including:

1. LLM-powered literature research

Our custom-tailored LLM extracted and formalized all relevant information about the protein from a large set of structured and unstructured data sources and stored it in the form of a Knowledge Graph. This comprehensive analysis allowed us to gain insight into Ribonuclease H2 subunit C therapeutic significance, existing small molecule ligands, relevant off-targets, and protein-protein interactions.

 Fig. 1. Preliminary target research workflow

2. AI-Driven Conformational Ensemble Generation

Starting from the initial protein structure, we employed advanced AI algorithms to predict alternative functional states of Ribonuclease H2 subunit C, including large-scale conformational changes along "soft" collective coordinates. Through molecular simulations with AI-enhanced sampling and trajectory clustering, we explored the broad conformational space of the protein and identified its representative structures. Utilizing diffusion-based AI models and active learning AutoML, we generated a statistically robust ensemble of equilibrium protein conformations that capture the receptor's full dynamic behavior, providing a robust foundation for accurate structure-based drug design.

 Fig. 2. AI-powered molecular dynamics simulations workflow

3. Binding pockets identification and characterization

We employed the AI-based pocket prediction module to discover orthosteric, allosteric, hidden, and cryptic binding pockets on the protein’s surface. Our technique integrates the LLM-driven literature search and structure-aware ensemble-based pocket detection algorithm that utilizes previously established protein dynamics. Tentative pockets are then subject to AI scoring and ranking with simultaneous detection of false positives. In the final step, the AI model assesses the druggability of each pocket enabling a comprehensive selection of the most promising pockets for further targeting.

 Fig. 3. AI-based binding pocket detection workflow

4. AI-Powered Virtual Screening

Our ecosystem is equipped to perform AI-driven virtual screening on Ribonuclease H2 subunit C. With access to a vast chemical space and cutting-edge AI docking algorithms, we can rapidly and reliably predict the most promising, novel, diverse, potent, and safe small molecule ligands of Ribonuclease H2 subunit C. This approach allows us to achieve an excellent hit rate and to identify compounds ready for advanced lead discovery and optimization.

 Fig. 4. The screening workflow of Receptor.AI

Receptor.AI, in partnership with Reaxense, developed a next-generation technology for on-demand focused library design to enable extensive target exploration.

The focused library for Ribonuclease H2 subunit C includes a list of the most effective modulators, each annotated with 38 ADME-Tox and 32 physicochemical and drug-likeness parameters. Furthermore, each compound is shown with its optimal docking poses, affinity scores, and activity scores, offering a detailed summary.

Ribonuclease H2 subunit C

partner:

Reaxense

upacc:

Q8TDP1

UPID:

RNH2C_HUMAN

Alternative names:

Aicardi-Goutieres syndrome 3 protein; RNase H1 small subunit; Ribonuclease HI subunit C

Alternative UPACC:

Q8TDP1; Q9H7F5

Background:

Ribonuclease H2 subunit C, also known as Aicardi-Goutieres syndrome 3 protein, plays a crucial role in DNA replication. It is a non-catalytic subunit of RNase H2, responsible for degrading the RNA of RNA:DNA hybrids, facilitating the removal of RNA primers during DNA replication, and excising single ribonucleotides from DNA:RNA duplexes.

Therapeutic significance:

Given its involvement in Aicardi-Goutieres syndrome 3, characterized by severe neurological dysfunctions and early childhood mortality, understanding the role of Ribonuclease H2 subunit C could open doors to potential therapeutic strategies.

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