Publication | Open Access
Global Transitions of Proteins Explored by a Multiscale Hybrid Methodology: Application to Adenylate Kinase
76
Citations
49
References
2013
Year
Protein AssemblyMolecular BiologyComputational ChemistryMolecular DynamicsMolecular DesignAdenylate KinaseTransition PathwaysProtein FoldingNmp MovementsBiophysicsGlobal TransitionsMacromolecular MachineProtein ModelingStructural BiologyNatural SciencesMultiscale Hybrid MethodologyProtein EngineeringMolecular BiophysicsCollective Molecular DynamicsMedicineComputational Biophysics
Efficient and accurate mapping of transition pathways is a challenging problem in allosteric proteins. We propose here a to our knowledge new methodology called collective molecular dynamics (coMD). coMD takes advantage of the collective modes of motions encoded by the fold, simultaneously evaluating the interactions and energetics via a full-atomic MD simulation protocol. The basic approach is to deform the structure collectively along the modes predicted by the anisotropic network model, upon selecting them via a Monte Carlo/Metropolis algorithm from among the complete pool of all accessible modes. Application to adenylate kinase, an allosteric enzyme composed of three domains, CORE, LID, and NMP, shows that both open-to-closed and closed-to-open transitions are readily sampled by coMD, with large-scale motions of the LID dominating. An energy-barrier crossing occurs during the NMP movements. The energy barrier originates from a switch between the salt bridges K136-D118 at the LID-CORE interface and K57-E170 and D33-R156 at the CORE-NMP and LID-NMP interfaces, respectively. Despite its simplicity and computing efficiency, coMD yields ensembles of transition pathways in close accord with detailed full atomic simulations, lending support to its utility as a multiscale hybrid method for efficiently exploring the allosteric transitions of multidomain or multimeric proteins.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1