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1.
Mol Cell ; 83(10): 1677-1692.e8, 2023 05 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37207626

RESUMEN

PERIOD (PER) and Casein Kinase 1δ regulate circadian rhythms through a phosphoswitch that controls PER stability and repressive activity in the molecular clock. CK1δ phosphorylation of the familial advanced sleep phase (FASP) serine cluster embedded within the Casein Kinase 1 binding domain (CK1BD) of mammalian PER1/2 inhibits its activity on phosphodegrons to stabilize PER and extend circadian period. Here, we show that the phosphorylated FASP region (pFASP) of PER2 directly interacts with and inhibits CK1δ. Co-crystal structures in conjunction with molecular dynamics simulations reveal how pFASP phosphoserines dock into conserved anion binding sites near the active site of CK1δ. Limiting phosphorylation of the FASP serine cluster reduces product inhibition, decreasing PER2 stability and shortening circadian period in human cells. We found that Drosophila PER also regulates CK1δ via feedback inhibition through the phosphorylated PER-Short domain, revealing a conserved mechanism by which PER phosphorylation near the CK1BD regulates CK1 kinase activity.


Asunto(s)
Relojes Circadianos , Proteínas Circadianas Period , Animales , Humanos , Fosforilación , Retroalimentación , Proteínas Circadianas Period/genética , Proteínas Circadianas Period/metabolismo , Quinasa de la Caseína I/genética , Quinasa de la Caseína I/metabolismo , Ritmo Circadiano/genética , Drosophila/metabolismo , Serina/metabolismo , Mamíferos/metabolismo
2.
Nature ; 608(7922): 429-435, 2022 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35922510

RESUMEN

Bacteria encode myriad defences that target the genomes of infecting bacteriophage, including restriction-modification and CRISPR-Cas systems1. In response, one family of large bacteriophages uses a nucleus-like compartment to protect its replicating genomes by excluding host defence factors2-4. However, the principal composition and structure of this compartment remain unknown. Here we find that the bacteriophage nuclear shell assembles primarily from one protein, which we name chimallin (ChmA). Combining cryo-electron tomography of nuclear shells in bacteriophage-infected cells and cryo-electron microscopy of a minimal chimallin compartment in vitro, we show that chimallin self-assembles as a flexible sheet into closed micrometre-scale compartments. The architecture and assembly dynamics of the chimallin shell suggest mechanisms for its nucleation and growth, and its role as a scaffold for phage-encoded factors mediating macromolecular transport, cytoskeletal interactions, and viral maturation.


Asunto(s)
Bacterias , Bacteriófagos , Compartimento Celular , Proteínas Virales , Ensamble de Virus , Bacterias/citología , Bacterias/inmunología , Bacterias/metabolismo , Bacterias/virología , Bacteriófagos/química , Bacteriófagos/inmunología , Bacteriófagos/fisiología , Bacteriófagos/ultraestructura , Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Proteínas Virales/química , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo , Proteínas Virales/ultraestructura
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(35): e2322077121, 2024 Aug 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39172779

RESUMEN

2'-deoxy-ATP (dATP) improves cardiac function by increasing the rate of crossbridge cycling and Ca[Formula: see text] transient decay. However, the mechanisms of these effects and how therapeutic responses to dATP are achieved when dATP is only a small fraction of the total ATP pool remain poorly understood. Here, we used a multiscale computational modeling approach to analyze the mechanisms by which dATP improves ventricular function. We integrated atomistic simulations of prepowerstroke myosin and actomyosin association, filament-scale Markov state modeling of sarcomere mechanics, cell-scale analysis of myocyte Ca[Formula: see text] dynamics and contraction, organ-scale modeling of biventricular mechanoenergetics, and systems level modeling of circulatory dynamics. Molecular and Brownian dynamics simulations showed that dATP increases the actomyosin association rate by 1.9 fold. Markov state models predicted that dATP increases the pool of myosin heads available for crossbridge cycling, increasing steady-state force development at low dATP fractions by 1.3 fold due to mechanosensing and nearest-neighbor cooperativity. This was found to be the dominant mechanism by which small amounts of dATP can improve contractile function at myofilament to organ scales. Together with faster myocyte Ca[Formula: see text] handling, this led to improved ventricular contractility, especially in a failing heart model in which dATP increased ejection fraction by 16% and the energy efficiency of cardiac contraction by 1%. This work represents a complete multiscale model analysis of a small molecule myosin modulator from single molecule to organ system biophysics and elucidates how the molecular mechanisms of dATP may improve cardiovascular function in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.


Asunto(s)
Nucleótidos de Desoxiadenina , Insuficiencia Cardíaca , Insuficiencia Cardíaca/tratamiento farmacológico , Insuficiencia Cardíaca/fisiopatología , Nucleótidos de Desoxiadenina/metabolismo , Animales , Humanos , Función Ventricular , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Contracción Miocárdica/efectos de los fármacos , Miosinas/metabolismo , Sarcómeros/metabolismo , Actomiosina/metabolismo , Miocitos Cardíacos/metabolismo , Miocitos Cardíacos/efectos de los fármacos , Calcio/metabolismo , Cadenas de Markov
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(9): e2215836120, 2023 02 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36802417

RESUMEN

Muscle contraction is performed by arrays of contractile proteins in the sarcomere. Serious heart diseases, such as cardiomyopathy, can often be results of mutations in myosin and actin. Direct characterization of how small changes in the myosin-actin complex impact its force production remains challenging. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, although capable of studying protein structure-function relationships, are limited owing to the slow timescale of the myosin cycle as well as a lack of various intermediate structures for the actomyosin complex. Here, employing comparative modeling and enhanced sampling MD simulations, we show how the human cardiac myosin generates force during the mechanochemical cycle. Initial conformational ensembles for different myosin-actin states are learned from multiple structural templates with Rosetta. This enables us to efficiently sample the energy landscape of the system using Gaussian accelerated MD. Key myosin loop residues, whose substitutions are related to cardiomyopathy, are identified to form stable or metastable interactions with the actin surface. We find that the actin-binding cleft closure is allosterically coupled to the myosin motor core transitions and ATP-hydrolysis product release from the active site. Furthermore, a gate between switch I and switch II is suggested to control phosphate release at the prepowerstroke state. Our approach demonstrates the ability to link sequence and structural information to motor functions.


Asunto(s)
Actinas , Actomiosina , Humanos , Actomiosina/metabolismo , Actinas/metabolismo , Miosinas/metabolismo , Citoesqueleto de Actina/metabolismo , Conformación Proteica , Adenosina Trifosfato/metabolismo
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(2)2022 01 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34996868

RESUMEN

Lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2) associates with low- and high-density lipoproteins in human plasma and specifically hydrolyzes circulating oxidized phospholipids involved in oxidative stress. The association of this enzyme with the lipoprotein's phospholipid monolayer to access its substrate is the most crucial first step in its catalytic cycle. The current study demonstrates unequivocally that a significant movement of a major helical peptide region occurs upon membrane binding, resulting in a large conformational change upon Lp-PLA2 binding to a phospholipid surface. This allosteric regulation of an enzyme's activity by a large membrane-like interface inducing a conformational change in the catalytic site defines a unique dimension of allosterism. The mechanism by which this enzyme associates with phospholipid interfaces to select and extract a single phospholipid substrate molecule and carry out catalysis is key to understanding its physiological functioning. A lipidomics platform was employed to determine the precise substrate specificity of human recombinant Lp-PLA2 and mutants. This study uniquely elucidates the association mechanism of this enzyme with membranes and its resulting conformational change as well as the extraction and binding of specific oxidized and short acyl-chain phospholipid substrates. Deuterium exchange mass spectrometry coupled with molecular dynamics simulations was used to define the precise specificity of the subsite for the oxidized fatty acid at the sn-2 position of the phospholipid backbone. Despite the existence of several crystal structures of this enzyme cocrystallized with inhibitors, little was understood about Lp-PLA2's specificity toward oxidized phospholipids.


Asunto(s)
1-Alquil-2-acetilglicerofosfocolina Esterasa/química , 1-Alquil-2-acetilglicerofosfocolina Esterasa/metabolismo , Regulación Alostérica , Sitios de Unión , Catálisis , Dominio Catalítico , Ácidos Grasos , Humanos , Hidrólisis , Lipoproteínas HDL/metabolismo , Membranas , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Fosfolípidos/metabolismo , Especificidad por Sustrato
6.
J Chem Inf Model ; 64(13): 5232-5241, 2024 Jul 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38874541

RESUMEN

Discovered in the 1920s, cytochrome bd is a terminal oxidase that has received renewed attention as a drug target since its atomic structure was first determined in 2016. Only found in prokaryotes, we study it here as a drug target for Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). Most previous drug discovery efforts toward cytochrome bd have involved analogues of the canonical substrate quinone, known as Aurachin D. Here, we report six new cytochrome bd inhibitor scaffolds determined from a computational screen and confirmed on target activity through in vitro testing. These scaffolds provide new avenues for lead optimization toward Mtb therapeutics.


Asunto(s)
Antituberculosos , Inhibidores Enzimáticos , Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzimología , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/efectos de los fármacos , Antituberculosos/farmacología , Antituberculosos/química , Inhibidores Enzimáticos/farmacología , Inhibidores Enzimáticos/química , Tuberculosis/tratamiento farmacológico , Oxidorreductasas/antagonistas & inhibidores , Oxidorreductasas/metabolismo , Oxidorreductasas/química , Modelos Moleculares , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(16)2021 04 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33846262

RESUMEN

Enzymes in multistep metabolic pathways utilize an array of regulatory mechanisms to maintain a delicate homeostasis [K. Magnuson, S. Jackowski, C. O. Rock, J. E. Cronan, Jr, Microbiol. Rev. 57, 522-542 (1993)]. Carrier proteins in particular play an essential role in shuttling substrates between appropriate enzymes in metabolic pathways. Although hypothesized [E. Ploskon et al., Chem. Biol. 17, 776-785 (2010)], allosteric regulation of substrate delivery has never before been demonstrated for any acyl carrier protein (ACP)-dependent pathway. Studying these mechanisms has remained challenging due to the transient and dynamic nature of protein-protein interactions, the vast diversity of substrates, and substrate instability [K. Finzel, D. J. Lee, M. D. Burkart, ChemBioChem 16, 528-547 (2015)]. Here we demonstrate a unique communication mechanism between the ACP and partner enzymes using solution NMR spectroscopy and molecular dynamics to elucidate allostery that is dependent on fatty acid chain length. We demonstrate that partner enzymes can allosterically distinguish between chain lengths via protein-protein interactions as structural features of substrate sequestration are translated from within the ACP four-helical bundle to the protein surface, without the need for stochastic chain flipping. These results illuminate details of cargo communication by the ACP that can serve as a foundation for engineering carrier protein-dependent pathways for specific, desired products.


Asunto(s)
Proteína Transportadora de Acilo/metabolismo , Proteína Transportadora de Acilo/ultraestructura , Regulación Alostérica/fisiología , Proteína Transportadora de Acilo/fisiología , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular/métodos , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Conformación Proteica , Dominios y Motivos de Interacción de Proteínas/fisiología , Mapas de Interacción de Proteínas/fisiología
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(14)2021 04 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33782130

RESUMEN

The atomic structure of the complete myosin tail within thick filaments isolated from Lethocerus indicus flight muscle is described and compared to crystal structures of recombinant, human cardiac myosin tail segments. Overall, the agreement is good with three exceptions: the proximal S2, in which the filament has heads attached but the crystal structure doesn't, and skip regions 2 and 4. At the head-tail junction, the tail α-helices are asymmetrically structured encompassing well-defined unfolding of 12 residues for one myosin tail, ∼4 residues of the other, and different degrees of α-helix unwinding for both tail α-helices, thereby providing an atomic resolution description of coiled-coil "uncoiling" at the head-tail junction. Asymmetry is observed in the nonhelical C termini; one C-terminal segment is intercalated between ribbons of myosin tails, the other apparently terminating at Skip 4 of another myosin tail. Between skip residues, crystal and filament structures agree well. Skips 1 and 3 also agree well and show the expected α-helix unwinding and coiled-coil untwisting in response to skip residue insertion. Skips 2 and 4 are different. Skip 2 is accommodated in an unusual manner through an increase in α-helix radius and corresponding reduction in rise/residue. Skip 4 remains helical in one chain, with the other chain unfolded, apparently influenced by the acidic myosin C terminus. The atomic model may shed some light on thick filament mechanosensing and is a step in understanding the complex roles that thick filaments of all species undergo during muscle contraction.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de Insectos/química , Miosina Tipo II/química , Animales , Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Hemípteros , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Músculo Esquelético/química , Músculo Esquelético/ultraestructura , Conformación Proteica en Hélice alfa
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(39): 24224-24233, 2020 09 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32929027

RESUMEN

Fatty acid synthases (FASs) and polyketide synthases (PKSs) iteratively elongate and often reduce two-carbon ketide units in de novo fatty acid and polyketide biosynthesis. Cycles of chain extensions in FAS and PKS are initiated by an acyltransferase (AT), which loads monomer units onto acyl carrier proteins (ACPs), small, flexible proteins that shuttle covalently linked intermediates between catalytic partners. Formation of productive ACP-AT interactions is required for catalysis and specificity within primary and secondary FAS and PKS pathways. Here, we use the Escherichia coli FAS AT, FabD, and its cognate ACP, AcpP, to interrogate type II FAS ACP-AT interactions. We utilize a covalent crosslinking probe to trap transient interactions between AcpP and FabD to elucidate the X-ray crystal structure of a type II ACP-AT complex. Our structural data are supported using a combination of mutational, crosslinking, and kinetic analyses, and long-timescale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Together, these complementary approaches reveal key catalytic features of FAS ACP-AT interactions. These mechanistic inferences suggest that AcpP adopts multiple, productive conformations at the AT binding interface, allowing the complex to sustain high transacylation rates. Furthermore, MD simulations support rigid body subdomain motions within the FabD structure that may play a key role in AT activity and substrate selectivity.


Asunto(s)
Proteína Transportadora de Acilo/metabolismo , S-Maloniltransferasa de la Proteína Transportadora de Grupos Acilo/metabolismo , Dominio Catalítico , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Acido Graso Sintasa Tipo II/metabolismo , Cristalografía por Rayos X
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(14): 6775-6783, 2019 04 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30872475

RESUMEN

Fatty acid biosynthesis in α- and γ-proteobacteria requires two functionally distinct dehydratases, FabA and FabZ. Here, mechanistic cross-linking facilitates the structural characterization of a stable hexameric complex of six Escherichia coli FabZ dehydratase subunits with six AcpP acyl carrier proteins. The crystal structure sheds light on the divergent substrate selectivity of FabA and FabZ by revealing distinct architectures of the binding pocket. Molecular dynamics simulations demonstrate differential biasing of substrate orientations and conformations within the active sites of FabA and FabZ such that FabZ is preorganized to catalyze only dehydration, while FabA is primed for both dehydration and isomerization.


Asunto(s)
Proteína Transportadora de Acilo/química , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/química , Escherichia coli/química , Acido Graso Sintasa Tipo II/química , Ácidos Grasos/química , Hidroliasas/química , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Complejos Multienzimáticos/química , Proteína Transportadora de Acilo/genética , Proteína Transportadora de Acilo/metabolismo , Catálisis , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Escherichia coli/genética , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/genética , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Acido Graso Sintasa Tipo II/genética , Acido Graso Sintasa Tipo II/metabolismo , Ácidos Grasos/biosíntesis , Ácidos Grasos/genética , Hidroliasas/genética , Hidroliasas/metabolismo , Complejos Multienzimáticos/genética , Complejos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(30): 14989-14994, 2019 07 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31270236

RESUMEN

Ligand-receptor binding and unbinding are fundamental biomolecular processes and particularly essential to drug efficacy. Environmental water fluctuations, however, impact the corresponding thermodynamics and kinetics and thereby challenge theoretical descriptions. Here, we devise a holistic, implicit-solvent, multimethod approach to predict the (un)binding kinetics for a generic ligand-pocket model. We use the variational implicit-solvent model (VISM) to calculate the solute-solvent interfacial structures and the corresponding free energies, and combine the VISM with the string method to obtain the minimum energy paths and transition states between the various metastable ("dry" and "wet") hydration states. The resulting dry-wet transition rates are then used in a spatially dependent multistate continuous-time Markov chain Brownian dynamics simulation and the related Fokker-Planck equation calculations of the ligand stochastic motion, providing the mean first-passage times for binding and unbinding. We find the hydration transitions to significantly slow down the binding process, in semiquantitative agreement with existing explicit-water simulations, but significantly accelerate the unbinding process. Moreover, our methods allow the characterization of nonequilibrium hydration states of pocket and ligand during the ligand movement, for which we find substantial memory and hysteresis effects for binding vs. unbinding. Our study thus provides a significant step forward toward efficient, physics-based interpretation and predictions of the complex kinetics in realistic ligand-receptor systems.


Asunto(s)
Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Conformación Proteica , Interacciones Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Cinética , Ligandos , Unión Proteica , Solventes/química
12.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 16(4): e1007756, 2020 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32251448

RESUMEN

Recent advances in electron microscopy have enabled the imaging of single cells in 3D at nanometer length scale resolutions. An uncharted frontier for in silico biology is the ability to simulate cellular processes using these observed geometries. Enabling such simulations requires watertight meshing of electron micrograph images into 3D volume meshes, which can then form the basis of computer simulations of such processes using numerical techniques such as the finite element method. In this paper, we describe the use of our recently rewritten mesh processing software, GAMer 2, to bridge the gap between poorly conditioned meshes generated from segmented micrographs and boundary marked tetrahedral meshes which are compatible with simulation. We demonstrate the application of a workflow using GAMer 2 to a series of electron micrographs of neuronal dendrite morphology explored at three different length scales and show that the resulting meshes are suitable for finite element simulations. This work is an important step towards making physical simulations of biological processes in realistic geometries routine. Innovations in algorithms to reconstruct and simulate cellular length scale phenomena based on emerging structural data will enable realistic physical models and advance discovery at the interface of geometry and cellular processes. We posit that a new frontier at the intersection of computational technologies and single cell biology is now open.


Asunto(s)
Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Imagenología Tridimensional/métodos , Algoritmos , Simulación por Computador , Dendritas/fisiología , Difusión , Análisis de Elementos Finitos , Humanos , Modelos Biológicos , Modelos Teóricos , Programas Informáticos , Mallas Quirúrgicas
13.
J Chem Inf Model ; 61(7): 3495-3501, 2021 07 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33939913

RESUMEN

The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has rapidly spread across the globe, posing an urgent health concern. Many quests to computationally identify treatments against the virus rely on in silico small molecule docking to experimentally determined structures of viral proteins. One limit to these approaches is that protein dynamics are often unaccounted for, leading to overlooking transient, druggable conformational states. Using Gaussian accelerated molecular dynamics to enhance sampling of conformational space, we identified cryptic pockets within the SARS-CoV-2 main protease, including some within regions far from the active site. These simulations sampled comparable dynamics and pocket volumes to conventional brute force simulations carried out on two orders of magnitude greater timescales.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , SARS-CoV-2 , Dominio Catalítico , Humanos , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Péptido Hidrolasas , Inhibidores de Proteasas , Proteínas Virales
14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(12): 3036-3041, 2018 03 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29507218

RESUMEN

Protein-protein binding is key in cellular signaling processes. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of protein-protein binding, however, are challenging due to limited timescales. In particular, binding of the medically important G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) with intracellular signaling proteins has not been simulated with MD to date. Here, we report a successful simulation of the binding of a G-protein mimetic nanobody to the M2 muscarinic GPCR using the robust Gaussian accelerated MD (GaMD) method. Through long-timescale GaMD simulations over 4,500 ns, the nanobody was observed to bind the receptor intracellular G-protein-coupling site, with a minimum rmsd of 2.48 Å in the nanobody core domain compared with the X-ray structure. Binding of the nanobody allosterically closed the orthosteric ligand-binding pocket, being consistent with the recent experimental finding. In the absence of nanobody binding, the receptor orthosteric pocket sampled open and fully open conformations. The GaMD simulations revealed two low-energy intermediate states during nanobody binding to the M2 receptor. The flexible receptor intracellular loops contribute remarkable electrostatic, polar, and hydrophobic residue interactions in recognition and binding of the nanobody. These simulations provided important insights into the mechanism of GPCR-nanobody binding and demonstrated the applicability of GaMD in modeling dynamic protein-protein interactions.


Asunto(s)
Receptor Muscarínico M2/metabolismo , Receptores Acoplados a Proteínas G/metabolismo , Anticuerpos de Dominio Único/fisiología , Simulación por Computador , Modelos Moleculares , Unión Proteica , Conformación Proteica , Receptor Muscarínico M2/química , Receptores Acoplados a Proteínas G/química , Termodinámica
15.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(44): 11129-11137, 2018 10 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30301791

RESUMEN

Increases in CO2 concentration in plant leaves due to respiration in the dark and the continuing atmospheric [CO2] rise cause closing of stomatal pores, thus affecting plant-water relations globally. However, the underlying CO2/bicarbonate (CO2/HCO3-) sensing mechanisms remain unknown. [CO2] elevation in leaves triggers stomatal closure by anion efflux mediated via the SLAC1 anion channel localized in the plasma membrane of guard cells. Previous reconstitution analysis has suggested that intracellular bicarbonate ions might directly up-regulate SLAC1 channel activity. However, whether such a CO2/HCO3- regulation of SLAC1 is relevant for CO2 control of stomatal movements in planta remains unknown. Here, we computationally probe for candidate bicarbonate-interacting sites within the SLAC1 anion channel via long-timescale Gaussian accelerated molecular dynamics (GaMD) simulations. Mutations of two putative bicarbonate-interacting residues, R256 and R321, impaired the enhancement of the SLAC1 anion channel activity by CO2/HCO3- in Xenopus oocytes. Mutations of the neighboring charged amino acid K255 and residue R432 and the predicted gate residue F450 did not affect HCO3- regulation of SLAC1. Notably, gas-exchange experiments with slac1-transformed plants expressing mutated SLAC1 proteins revealed that the SLAC1 residue R256 is required for CO2 regulation of stomatal movements in planta, but not for abscisic acid (ABA)-induced stomatal closing. Patch clamp analyses of guard cells show that activation of S-type anion channels by CO2/HCO3-, but not by ABA, was impaired, indicating the relevance of R256 for CO2 signal transduction. Together, these analyses suggest that the SLAC1 anion channel is one of the physiologically relevant CO2/HCO3- sensors in guard cells.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Bicarbonatos/metabolismo , Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Proteínas de la Membrana/metabolismo , Estomas de Plantas/metabolismo , Ácido Abscísico/farmacología , Animales , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Membrana Celular/efectos de los fármacos , Membrana Celular/metabolismo , Transporte Iónico/efectos de los fármacos , Transporte Iónico/fisiología , Mutación/efectos de los fármacos , Mutación/fisiología , Oocitos/efectos de los fármacos , Oocitos/metabolismo , Hojas de la Planta/efectos de los fármacos , Hojas de la Planta/metabolismo , Estomas de Plantas/efectos de los fármacos , Transducción de Señal/efectos de los fármacos , Transducción de Señal/fisiología , Agua/metabolismo , Xenopus/metabolismo
16.
Biophys J ; 119(11): 2275-2289, 2020 12 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33130120

RESUMEN

Influenza neuraminidase is an important drug target. Glycans are present on neuraminidase and are generally considered to inhibit antibody binding via their glycan shield. In this work, we studied the effect of glycans on the binding kinetics of antiviral drugs to the influenza neuraminidase. We created all-atom in silico systems of influenza neuraminidase with experimentally derived glycoprofiles consisting of four systems with different glycan conformations and one system without glycans. Using Brownian dynamics simulations, we observe a two- to eightfold decrease in the rate of ligand binding to the primary binding site of neuraminidase due to the presence of glycans. These glycans are capable of covering much of the surface area of neuraminidase, and the ligand binding inhibition is derived from glycans sterically occluding the primary binding site on a neighboring monomer. Our work also indicates that drugs preferentially bind to the primary binding site (i.e., the active site) over the secondary binding site, and we propose a binding mechanism illustrating this. These results help illuminate the complex interplay between glycans and ligand binding on the influenza membrane protein neuraminidase.


Asunto(s)
Antivirales , Neuraminidasa/química , Polisacáridos/química , Proteínas Virales/química , Antivirales/farmacología , Sitios de Unión
17.
Biophys J ; 118(5): 1003-1008, 2020 03 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32032503

RESUMEN

Advances in imaging methods such as electron microscopy, tomography, and other modalities are enabling high-resolution reconstructions of cellular and organelle geometries. Such advances pave the way for using these geometries for biophysical and mathematical modeling once these data can be represented as a geometric mesh, which, when carefully conditioned, enables the discretization and solution of partial differential equations. In this work, we outline the steps for a naïve user to approach the Geometry-preserving Adaptive MeshER software version 2, a mesh generation code written in C++ designed to convert structural data sets to realistic geometric meshes while preserving the underlying shapes. We present two example cases: 1) mesh generation at the subcellular scale as informed by electron tomography and 2) meshing a protein with a structure from x-ray crystallography. We further demonstrate that the meshes generated by the Geometry-preserving Adaptive MeshER software are suitable for use with numerical methods. Together, this collection of libraries and tools simplifies the process of constructing realistic geometric meshes from structural biology data.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Teóricos , Programas Informáticos , Algoritmos , Biofisica , Simulación por Computador
18.
Q Rev Biophys ; 512018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30555184

RESUMEN

Understanding the conformational dynamics of CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat)-Cas9 is of the utmost importance for improving its genome editing capability. Here, molecular dynamics simulations performed using Anton-2 - a specialized supercomputer capturing micro-to-millisecond biophysical events in real time and at atomic-level resolution - reveal the activation process of the endonuclease Cas9 toward DNA cleavage. Over the unbiased simulation, we observe that the spontaneous approach of the catalytic domain HNH to the DNA cleavage site is accompanied by a remarkable structural remodeling of the recognition (REC) lobe, which exerts a key role for DNA cleavage. Specifically, the significant conformational changes and the collective conformational dynamics of the REC lobe indicate a mechanism by which the REC1-3 regions 'sense' nucleic acids, 'regulate' the HNH conformational transition, and ultimately 'lock' the HNH domain at the cleavage site, contributing to its catalytic competence. By integrating additional independent simulations and existing experimental data, we provide a solid validation of the activated HNH conformation, which had been so far poorly characterized, and we deliver a comprehensive understanding of the role of REC1-3 in the activation process. Considering the importance of the REC lobe in the specificity of Cas9, this study poses the basis for fully understanding how the REC components control the cleavage of off-target sequences, laying the foundation for future engineering efforts toward improved genome editing.


Asunto(s)
Proteína 9 Asociada a CRISPR/química , Sistemas CRISPR-Cas , Edición Génica , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Dominio Catalítico , Repeticiones Palindrómicas Cortas Agrupadas y Regularmente Espaciadas , División del ADN , Humanos , Análisis de Componente Principal
19.
Arch Biochem Biophys ; 695: 108582, 2020 11 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32956632

RESUMEN

2'-deoxy-ATP (dATP) is a naturally occurring small molecule that has shown promise as a therapeutic because it significantly increases cardiac myocyte force development even at low dATP/ATP ratios. To investigate mechanisms by which dATP alters myosin crossbridge dynamics, we used Brownian dynamics simulations to calculate association rates between actin and ADP- or dADP-bound myosin. These rates were then directly incorporated in a mechanistic Monte Carlo Markov Chain model of cooperative sarcomere contraction. A unique combination of increased powerstroke and detachment rates was required to match experimental steady-state and kinetic data for dATP force production in rat cardiac myocytes when the myosin attachment rate in the model was constrained by the results of a Brownian dynamics simulation. Nearest-neighbor cooperativity was seen to contribute to, but not fully explain, the steep relationship between dATP/ATP ratio and steady-state force-development observed at lower dATP concentrations. Dynamic twitch simulations performed using measured calcium transients as inputs showed that the effects of dATP on the crossbridge alone were not sufficient to explain experimentally observed enhancement of relaxation kinetics by dATP treatment. Hence, dATP may also affect calcium handling even at low concentrations. By enabling the effects of dATP on sarcomere mechanics to be predicted, this multi-scale modeling framework may elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which dATP can have therapeutic effects on cardiac contractile dysfunction.


Asunto(s)
Nucleótidos de Desoxiadenina/farmacología , Modelos Cardiovasculares , Contracción Miocárdica/efectos de los fármacos , Miocardio/metabolismo , Miocitos Cardíacos/metabolismo , Sarcómeros/metabolismo , Animales , Valor Predictivo de las Pruebas , Ratas
20.
Nature ; 505(7483): 427-31, 2014 Jan 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24362570

RESUMEN

Acyl carrier protein (ACP) transports the growing fatty acid chain between enzymatic domains of fatty acid synthase (FAS) during biosynthesis. Because FAS enzymes operate on ACP-bound acyl groups, ACP must stabilize and transport the growing lipid chain. ACPs have a central role in transporting starting materials and intermediates throughout the fatty acid biosynthetic pathway. The transient nature of ACP-enzyme interactions impose major obstacles to obtaining high-resolution structural information about fatty acid biosynthesis, and a new strategy is required to study protein-protein interactions effectively. Here we describe the application of a mechanism-based probe that allows active site-selective covalent crosslinking of AcpP to FabA, the Escherichia coli ACP and fatty acid 3-hydroxyacyl-ACP dehydratase, respectively. We report the 1.9 Å crystal structure of the crosslinked AcpP-FabA complex as a homodimer in which AcpP exhibits two different conformations, representing probable snapshots of ACP in action: the 4'-phosphopantetheine group of AcpP first binds an arginine-rich groove of FabA, then an AcpP helical conformational change locks AcpP and FabA in place. Residues at the interface of AcpP and FabA are identified and validated by solution nuclear magnetic resonance techniques, including chemical shift perturbations and residual dipolar coupling measurements. These not only support our interpretation of the crystal structures but also provide an animated view of ACP in action during fatty acid dehydration. These techniques, in combination with molecular dynamics simulations, show for the first time that FabA extrudes the sequestered acyl chain from the ACP binding pocket before dehydration by repositioning helix III. Extensive sequence conservation among carrier proteins suggests that the mechanistic insights gleaned from our studies may be broadly applicable to fatty acid, polyketide and non-ribosomal biosynthesis. Here the foundation is laid for defining the dynamic action of carrier-protein activity in primary and secondary metabolism, providing insight into pathways that can have major roles in the treatment of cancer, obesity and infectious disease.


Asunto(s)
Proteína Transportadora de Acilo/química , Proteína Transportadora de Acilo/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/química , Ácidos Grasos/biosíntesis , Sitios de Unión , Dominio Catalítico , Reactivos de Enlaces Cruzados/química , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Acido Graso Sintasa Tipo II/química , Acido Graso Sintasa Tipo II/metabolismo , Histidina/metabolismo , Hidroliasas/química , Hidroliasas/metabolismo , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Modelos Moleculares , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Unión Proteica , Mapas de Interacción de Proteínas
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