{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Effect of PDGF-B aptamer on PDGFRβ/PDGF-B interaction: Molecular dynamics study. {Author}: Vu CQ;Rotkrua P;Soontornworajit B;Tantirungrotechai Y; {Journal}: J Mol Graph Model {Volume}: 82 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 06 2018 {Factor}: 2.942 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.jmgm.2018.04.012 {Abstract}: PDGFRβ/PDGF-B interaction plays a role in angiogenesis, and is mandatory in wound healing and cancer treatment. It has been reported that the PDGF-B aptamer was able to bind to PDGF-B, thus regulating the angiogenesis. However, the binding interaction between the aptamer and the growth factor, including the binding sites, has not been well investigated. This study applied a molecular dynamics (MD) simulation to investigate the aptamer-growth factor interaction in the presence or absence of a receptor (PDGFRβ). Characterization of the structure of an aptamer-growth factor complex revealed binding sites from each section in the complex. Upon the complex formation, PDGF-B and its aptamer exhibited less flexibility in their molecular movement, as indicated by the minimum values of RMSD, RMSF, loop-to-loop distance, and the summation of PCA eigenvalues. Our study of residue pairwise interaction demonstrated that the binding interaction was mainly contributed by electrostatic interaction between the positively-charged amino acid and the negatively-charged phosphate backbone. The role of the PDGF-B aptamer in PDGFRβ/PDGF-B interaction was also investigated. We demonstrated that the stability of the Apt-PDGF-B complex could prevent the presence of a competitor, of PDGFRβ, interrupting the binding process. Because the aptamer was capable of binding with PDGF-B, and blocking the growth factor from the PDGFRβ, it could down regulate the consequent signaling pathway. We provide evidence that the PDGF-BB aptamer is a promising molecule for regulation of angiogenesis. The MD study provides a molecular understanding to modification of the aptamer binding interaction, which could be used in a number of medical applications.