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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(33): 19938-19942, 2020 08 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32759212

RESUMEN

We use a bioinformatic description of amino acid dynamic properties, based on residue-specific average B factors, to construct a dynamics-based, large-scale description of a space of protein sequences. We examine the relationship between that space and an independently constructed, structure-based space comprising the same sequences. It is demonstrated that structure and dynamics are only moderately correlated. It is further shown that helical proteins fall into two classes with very different structure-dynamics relationships. We suggest that dynamics in the two helical classes are dominated by distinctly different modes--pseudo-one-dimensional, localized helical modes in one case, and pseudo-three-dimensional (3D) global modes in the other. Sheet/barrel and mixed-α/ß proteins exhibit more conventional structure-dynamics relationships. It is found that the strongest correlation between structure and dynamic properties arises when the latter are represented by the sequence average of the dynamic index, which corresponds physically to the overall mobility of the protein. None of these results are accessible to bioinformatic methods hitherto available.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas/química , Biología Computacional , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(7): 1493-1498, 2018 02 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29378960

RESUMEN

Accumulation of amyloid-beta (Aß), which is associated with Alzheimer's disease, can be caused by excess production or insufficient clearance. Because of its ß-sheet structure, fibrillar Aß is resistant to proteolysis, which would contribute to slow degradation of Aß plaques in vivo. Fibrillar Aß can be internalized by microglia, which are the scavenger cells of the brain, but the fibrils are degraded only slowly in microglial lysosomes. Cathepsin B is a lysosomal protease that has been shown to proteolyze fibrillar Aß. Tripeptidyl peptidase 1 (TPP1), a lysosomal serine protease, possesses endopeptidase activity and has been shown to cleave peptides between hydrophobic residues. Herein, we demonstrate that TPP1 is able to proteolyze fibrillar Aß efficiently. Mass spectrometry analysis of peptides released from fibrillar Aß digested with TPP1 reveals several endoproteolytic cleavages including some within ß-sheet regions that are important for fibril formation. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that these cleavages destabilize fibrillar ß-sheet structure. The demonstration that TPP1 can degrade fibrillar forms of Aß provides insight into the turnover of fibrillar Aß and may lead to new therapeutic methods to increase degradation of Aß plaques.


Asunto(s)
Aminopeptidasas/metabolismo , Péptidos beta-Amiloides/metabolismo , Dipeptidil-Peptidasas y Tripeptidil-Peptidasas/metabolismo , Fragmentos de Péptidos/metabolismo , Serina Proteasas/metabolismo , Aminopeptidasas/genética , Amiloide/metabolismo , Péptidos beta-Amiloides/química , Carbocianinas/química , Dipeptidil-Peptidasas y Tripeptidil-Peptidasas/genética , Colorantes Fluorescentes/química , Humanos , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Lisosomas/enzimología , Espectrometría de Masas , Modelos Moleculares , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Fragmentos de Péptidos/química , Conformación Proteica en Lámina beta , Dominios Proteicos , Estabilidad Proteica , Serina Proteasas/genética , Factores de Tiempo , Tripeptidil Peptidasa 1
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(7): 1578-1583, 2017 02 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28143938

RESUMEN

We recently introduced a physically based approach to sequence comparison, the property factor method (PFM). In the present work, we apply the PFM approach to the study of a challenging set of sequences-the bacterial chemotaxis protein CheY, the N-terminal receiver domain of the nitrogen regulation protein NT-NtrC, and the sporulation response regulator Spo0F. These are all response regulators involved in signal transduction. Despite functional similarity and structural homology, they exhibit low sequence identity. PFM sequence comparison demonstrates a statistically significant qualitative difference between the sequence of CheY and those of the other two proteins that is not found using conventional alignment methods. This difference is shown to be consonant with structural characteristics, using distance matrix comparisons. We also demonstrate that residues participating strongly in native contacts during unfolding are distributed differently in CheY than in the other two proteins. The PFM result is also in accord with dynamic simulation results of several types. Molecular dynamics simulations of all three proteins were carried out at several temperatures, and it is shown that the dynamics of CheY are predicted to differ from those of NT-NtrC and Spo0F. The predicted dynamic properties of the three proteins are in good agreement with experimentally determined B factors and with fluctuations predicted by the Gaussian network model. We pinpoint the differences between the PFM and traditional sequence comparisons and discuss the informatic basis for the ability of the PFM approach to detect physical differences between these sequences that are not apparent from traditional alignment-based comparison.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Proteínas Quimiotácticas Aceptoras de Metilo/genética , Alineación de Secuencia/métodos , Transducción de Señal/genética , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Proteínas Bacterianas/química , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Sitios de Unión/genética , Biología Computacional/métodos , Proteínas Quimiotácticas Aceptoras de Metilo/química , Proteínas Quimiotácticas Aceptoras de Metilo/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Dominios Proteicos , Homología de Secuencia de Aminoácido
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(7): 1808-10, 2016 Feb 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26831093

RESUMEN

The degree of informatic independence between the physical properties of amino acids as encoded in actual protein sequences is calculated. It is shown that no physical property can be identified that carries significantly less information than others and that the information overlap between different properties and different length scales along the sequence is essentially zero. These observations suggest that bioinformatic models based on arbitrarily selected sets of physical properties are inherently deficient.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional , Proteínas/química , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Análisis de Fourier
5.
J Comput Chem ; 39(28): 2360-2370, 2018 10 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30306573

RESUMEN

Based on the coarse-grained UNRES and NARES-2P models of proteins and nucleic acids, respectively, developed in our laboratory, in this work we have developed a coarse-grained model of systems containing proteins and nucleic acids. The UNRES and NARES-2P effective energy functions have been applied to the protein and nucleic-acid components of a system, respectively, while protein-nucleic-acid interactions have been described by the respective coarse-grained potentials developed in our recent work (Yin et al., J. Chem Theory Comput. 2015, 11, 1792). The Debye-Hückel screening has been applied to the electrostatic-interaction energy between the phosphate groups and charged amino-acid side chains. The model has been integrated into the UNRES package for coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations of proteins and the implementation has been tested for energy conservation in microcanonical molecular dynamics runs and for temperature conservation in canonical molecular dynamics runs. Two case studies were performed: (i) the dynamics of the Ku protein heterodimer bound to DNA, for which it was found that the Ku70/Ku80 protein complex plays an active role in DNA repairing and (ii) conformational changes of the multiple antibiotic resistance (MarA) protein occurring during DNA binding, for which the functionally important motions occurring during this process were identified. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Asunto(s)
ADN/química , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Proteínas/química , Conformación Proteica , Temperatura
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(16): 5029-32, 2015 Apr 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25848034

RESUMEN

The relationship between protein sequence and structure arises entirely from amino acid physical properties. An alternative method is therefore proposed to identify homologs in which residue equivalence is based exclusively on the pairwise physical property similarities of sequences. This approach, the property factor method (PFM), is entirely different from those in current use. A comparison is made between our method and PSI BLAST. We demonstrate that traditionally defined sequence similarity can be very low for pairs of sequences (which therefore cannot be identified using PSI BLAST), but similarity of physical property distributions results in almost identical 3D structures. The performance of PFM is shown to be better than that of PSI BLAST when sequence matching is comparable, based on a comparison using targets from CASP10 (89 targets) and CASP11 (51 targets). It is also shown that PFM outperforms PSI BLAST in informatically challenging targets.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional/métodos , Fenómenos Físicos , Proteínas/química , Homología de Secuencia de Aminoácido , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Modelos Moleculares , Datos de Secuencia Molecular
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(44): 13549-54, 2015 Nov 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26483482

RESUMEN

The origins of formation of an intermediate state involved in amyloid formation and ways to prevent it are illustrated with the example of the Formin binding protein 28 (FBP28) WW domain, which folds with biphasic kinetics. Molecular dynamics of protein folding trajectories are used to examine local and global motions and the time dependence of formation of contacts between C(α)s and C(ß)s of selected pairs of residues. Focus is placed on the WT FBP28 WW domain and its six mutants (L26D, L26E, L26W, E27Y, T29D, and T29Y), which have structures that are determined by high-resolution NMR spectroscopy. The origins of formation of an intermediate state are elucidated, viz. as formation of hairpin 1 by a hydrophobic collapse mechanism causing significant delay of formation of both hairpins, especially hairpin 2, which facilitates the emergence of an intermediate state. It seems that three-state folding is a major folding scenario for all six mutants and WT. Additionally, two-state and downhill folding scenarios were identified in ∼ 15% of the folding trajectories for L26D and L26W, in which both hairpins are formed by the Matheson-Scheraga mechanism much faster than in three-state folding. These results indicate that formation of hairpins connecting two antiparallel ß-strands determines overall folding. The correlations between the local and global motions identified for all folding trajectories lead to the identification of the residues making the main contributions in the formation of the intermediate state. The presented findings may provide an understanding of protein folding intermediates in general and lead to a procedure for their prevention.


Asunto(s)
Amiloide/química , Mutación , Proteínas/química , Proteínas/genética , Algoritmos , Proteínas Portadoras/química , Proteínas Portadoras/genética , Proteínas Portadoras/metabolismo , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Humanos , Cinética , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Pliegue de Proteína , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Termodinámica
8.
Q Rev Biophys ; 48(2): 117-77, 2015 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25850343

RESUMEN

This is a tour of a physical chemist through 65 years of protein chemistry from the time when emphasis was placed on the determination of the size and shape of the protein molecule as a colloidal particle, with an early breakthrough by James Sumner, followed by Linus Pauling and Fred Sanger, that a protein was a real molecule, albeit a macromolecule. It deals with the recognition of the nature and importance of hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions in determining the structure, properties, and biological function of proteins until the present acquisition of an understanding of the structure, thermodynamics, and folding pathways from a linear array of amino acids to a biological entity. Along the way, with a combination of experiment and theoretical interpretation, a mechanism was elucidated for the thrombin-induced conversion of fibrinogen to a fibrin blood clot and for the oxidative-folding pathways of ribonuclease A. Before the atomic structure of a protein molecule was determined by x-ray diffraction or nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, experimental studies of the fundamental interactions underlying protein structure led to several distance constraints which motivated the theoretical approach to determine protein structure, and culminated in the Empirical Conformational Energy Program for Peptides (ECEPP), an all-atom force field, with which the structures of fibrous collagen-like proteins and the 46-residue globular staphylococcal protein A were determined. To undertake the study of larger globular proteins, a physics-based coarse-grained UNited-RESidue (UNRES) force field was developed, and applied to the protein-folding problem in terms of structure, thermodynamics, dynamics, and folding pathways. Initially, single-chain and, ultimately, multiple-chain proteins were examined, and the methodology was extended to protein-protein interactions and to nucleic acids and to protein-nucleic acid interactions. The ultimate results led to an understanding of a variety of biological processes underlying natural and disease phenomena.


Asunto(s)
Química Física/historia , Química Física/métodos , Proteínas/química , Animales , Coagulación Sanguínea , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Unión Proteica , Pliegue de Proteína , Proteínas/metabolismo
9.
Bioinformatics ; 32(21): 3270-3278, 2016 11 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27378298

RESUMEN

Participating as the Cornell-Gdansk group, we have used our physics-based coarse-grained UNited RESidue (UNRES) force field to predict protein structure in the 11th Community Wide Experiment on the Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction (CASP11). Our methodology involved extensive multiplexed replica exchange simulations of the target proteins with a recently improved UNRES force field to provide better reproductions of the local structures of polypeptide chains. All simulations were started from fully extended polypeptide chains, and no external information was included in the simulation process except for weak restraints on secondary structure to enable us to finish each prediction within the allowed 3-week time window. Because of simplified UNRES representation of polypeptide chains, use of enhanced sampling methods, code optimization and parallelization and sufficient computational resources, we were able to treat, for the first time, all 55 human prediction targets with sizes from 44 to 595 amino acid residues, the average size being 251 residues. Complete structures of six single-domain proteins were predicted accurately, with the highest accuracy being attained for the T0769, for which the CαRMSD was 3.8 Å for 97 residues of the experimental structure. Correct structures were also predicted for 13 domains of multi-domain proteins with accuracy comparable to that of the best template-based modeling methods. With further improvements of the UNRES force field that are now underway, our physics-based coarse-grained approach to protein-structure prediction will eventually reach global prediction capacity and, consequently, reliability in simulating protein structure and dynamics that are important in biochemical processes. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: Freely available on the web at http://www.unres.pl/ CONTACT: has5@cornell.edu.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Moleculares , Proteínas/química , Animales , Humanos , Conformación Proteica , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados
10.
J Chem Inf Model ; 57(9): 2364-2377, 2017 09 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28809487

RESUMEN

By using the maximum likelihood method for force-field calibration recently developed in our laboratory, which is aimed at achieving the agreement between the simulated conformational ensembles of selected training proteins and the corresponding ensembles determined experimentally at various temperatures, the physics-based coarse-grained UNRES force field for simulations of protein structure and dynamics was optimized with seven small training proteins exhibiting a variety of secondary and tertiary structures. Four runs of optimization, in which the number of optimized force-field parameters was gradually increased, were carried out, and the resulting force fields were subsequently tested with a set of 22 α-, 12 ß-, and 12 α + ß-proteins not used in optimization. The variant in which energy-term weights, local, and correlation potentials, side-chain radii, and anisotropies were optimized turned out to be the most transferable and outperformed all previous versions of UNRES on the test set.


Asunto(s)
Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Proteínas/química , Proteínas/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Funciones de Verosimilitud , Conformación Proteica
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(14): 5225-9, 2014 Apr 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24706836

RESUMEN

We show that a Fourier-based sequence distance function is able to identify structural homologs of target sequences with high accuracy. It is shown that Fourier distances correlate very strongly with independently determined structural distances between molecules, a property of the method that is not attainable using conventional representations. It is further shown that the ability of the Fourier approach to identify protein folds is statistically far in excess of random expectation. It is then shown that, in actual searches for structural homologs of selected target sequences, the Fourier approach gives excellent results. On the basis of these results, we suggest that the global information detected by the Fourier representation is an essential feature of structure encoding in protein sequences and a key to structural homology detection.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas/química , Conformación Proteica , Pliegue de Proteína
12.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(23): 8458-63, 2014 Jun 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24912167

RESUMEN

By using local (free-energy profiles along the amino acid sequence and (13)C(α) chemical shifts) and global (principal component) analyses to examine the molecular dynamics of protein-folding trajectories, generated with the coarse-grained united-residue force field, for the B domain of staphylococcal protein A, we are able to (i) provide the main reason for formation of the mirror-image conformation of this protein, namely, a slow formation of the second loop and part of the third helix (Asp29-Asn35), caused by the presence of multiple local conformational states in this portion of the protein; (ii) show that formation of the mirror-image topology is a subtle effect resulting from local interactions; (iii) provide a mechanism for how protein A overcomes the barrier between the metastable mirror-image state and the native state; and (iv) offer a plausible reason to explain why protein A does not remain in the metastable mirror-image state even though the mirror-image and native conformations are at least energetically compatible.


Asunto(s)
Conformación Proteica , Pliegue de Proteína , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína , Proteínas/química , Algoritmos , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Cinética , Modelos Químicos , Modelos Moleculares , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Análisis de Componente Principal , Proteína Estafilocócica A/química , Termodinámica , Factores de Tiempo
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(51): 18243-8, 2014 Dec 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25489078

RESUMEN

To demonstrate the utility of the coarse-grained united-residue (UNRES) force field to compare experimental and computed kinetic data for folding proteins, we have performed long-time millisecond-timescale canonical Langevin molecular dynamics simulations of the triple ß-strand from the Formin binding protein 28 WW domain and six nonnatural variants, using UNRES. The results have been compared with available experimental data in both a qualitative and a quantitative manner. Complexities of the folding pathways, which cannot be determined experimentally, were revealed. The folding mechanisms obtained from the simulated folding kinetics are in agreement with experimental results, with a few discrepancies for which we have accounted. The origins of single- and double-exponential kinetics and their correlations with two- and three-state folding scenarios are shown to be related to the relative barrier heights between the various states. The rate constants obtained from time profiles of the fractions of the native, intermediate, and unfolded structures, and the kinetic equations fitted to them, correlate with the experimental values; however, they are about three orders of magnitude larger than the experimental ones for most of the systems. These differences are in agreement with the timescale extension derived by scaling down the friction of water and averaging out the fast degrees of freedom when passing from all-atom to a coarse-grained representation. Our results indicate that the UNRES force field can provide accurate predictions of folding kinetics of these WW domains, often used as models for the study of the mechanisms of proein folding.


Asunto(s)
Microscopía/métodos , Pliegue de Proteína , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Cinética
14.
J Mol Struct ; 1134: 576-581, 2017 Apr 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28919647

RESUMEN

Assessment of the relative amounts of the forms of the imidazole ring of Histidine (His), namely the protonated (H+) and the tautomeric Nε2-H and Nδ1-H forms, respectively, is a challenging task in NMR spectroscopy. Indeed, their determination by direct observation of the 15N and 13C chemical shifts or the one-bond C-H, 1JCH, Spin-Spin Coupling Constants (SSCC) requires knowledge of the "canonical" limiting values of these forms in which each one is present to the extent of 100%. In particular, at high-pH, an accurate determination of these "canonical" limiting values, at which the tautomeric forms of His coexist, is an elusive problem in NMR spectroscopy. Among different NMR-based approaches to treat this problem, we focus here on the computation, at the DFT level of theory, of the high-pH limiting value for the 1JCH SSCC of the imidazole ring of His. Solvent effects were considered by using the polarizable continuum model approach. The results of this computation suggest, first, that the value of 1JCε1H = 205 ± 1.0 Hz should be adopted as the canonical high-pH limiting value for this SSCC; second, the variation of 1JCε1H SSCC during tautomeric changes is minor, i.e., within ±1Hz; and, finally, the value of 1JCδ2H SSCC upon tautomeric changes is large (15 Hz) indicating that, at high-pH or for non-protonated His at any pH, the tautomeric fractions of the imidazole ring of His can be predicted accurately as a function of the observed value of 1JCδ2H SSCC.

15.
J Chem Phys ; 144(18): 184110, 2016 May 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27179474

RESUMEN

The folding of the N-terminal part of the B-domain of staphylococcal protein A (PDB ID: 1BDD, a 46-residue three-α-helix bundle) and the formin-binding protein 28 WW domain (PDB ID: 1E0L, a 37-residue three-stranded anti-parallel ß protein) was studied by means of Langevin dynamics with the coarse-grained UNRES force field to assess the influence of hydrodynamic interactions on protein-folding pathways and kinetics. The unfolded, intermediate, and native-like structures were identified by cluster analysis, and multi-exponential functions were fitted to the time dependence of the fractions of native and intermediate structures, respectively, to determine bulk kinetics. It was found that introducing hydrodynamic interactions slows down both the formation of an intermediate state and the transition from the collapsed structures to the final native-like structures by creating multiple kinetic traps. Therefore, introducing hydrodynamic interactions considerably slows the folding, as opposed to the results obtained from earlier studies with the use of Go-like models.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas Portadoras/química , Fragmentos de Péptidos/química , Proteína Estafilocócica A/química , Hidrodinámica , Cinética , Modelos Químicos , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Dominios Proteicos , Pliegue de Proteína
16.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(8): E662-7, 2013 Feb 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23378634

RESUMEN

An empirical continuum solvation model, solvation free energy density (SFED), has been developed to calculate solvation free energies of a molecule in the most frequently used solvents. A generalized version of the SFED model, generalized-SFED (G-SFED), is proposed here to calculate molecular solvation free energies in virtually any solvent. G-SFED provides an accurate and fast generalized framework without a complicated description of a solution. In the model, the solvation free energy of a solute is represented as a linear combination of empirical functions of the solute properties representing the effects of solute on various solute-solvent interactions, and the complementary solvent effects on these interactions were reflected in the linear expansion coefficients with a few solvent properties. G-SFED works well for a wide range of sizes and polarities of solute molecules in various solvents as shown by a set of 5,753 solvation free energies of diverse combinations of 103 solvents and 890 solutes. Octanol-water partition coefficients of small organic compounds and peptides were calculated with G-SFED with accuracy within 0.4 log unit for each group. The G-SFED computation time depends linearly on the number of nonhydrogen atoms (n) in a molecule, O(n).


Asunto(s)
Modelos Teóricos , Compuestos Orgánicos/química , Péptidos/química , Solubilidad , Termodinámica
17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(42): 16826-31, 2013 Oct 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24082119

RESUMEN

A method that makes use of information provided by the combination of (13)C(α) and (13)C(ß) chemical shifts, computed at the density functional level of theory, enables one to (i) validate, at the residue level, conformations of proteins and detect backbone or side-chain flaws by taking into account an ensemble average of chemical shifts over all of the conformations used to represent a protein, with a sensitivity of ∼90%; and (ii) provide a set of (χ1/χ2) torsional angles that leads to optimal agreement between the observed and computed (13)C(α) and (13)C(ß) chemical shifts. The method has been incorporated into the CheShift-2 protein validation Web server. To test the reliability of the provided set of (χ1/χ2) torsional angles, the side chains of all reported conformations of five NMR-determined protein models were refined by a simple routine, without using NOE-based distance restraints. The refinement of each of these five proteins leads to optimal agreement between the observed and computed (13)C(α) and (13)C(ß) chemical shifts for ∼94% of the flaws, on average, without introducing a significantly large number of violations of the NOE-based distance restraints for a distance range ≤ 0.5 , in which the largest number of distance violations occurs. The results of this work suggest that use of the provided set of (χ1/χ2) torsional angles together with other observables, such as NOEs, should lead to a fast and accurate refinement of the side-chain conformations of protein models.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Moleculares , Pliegue de Proteína , Proteínas/química , Resonancia Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína
18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(37): 14936-41, 2013 Sep 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23980156

RESUMEN

The performance of the physics-based protocol, whose main component is the United Residue (UNRES) physics-based coarse-grained force field, developed in our laboratory for the prediction of protein structure from amino acid sequence, is illustrated. Candidate models are selected, based on probabilities of the conformational families determined by multiplexed replica-exchange simulations, from the 10th Community Wide Experiment on the Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction (CASP10). For target T0663, classified as a new fold, which consists of two domains homologous to those of known proteins, UNRES predicted the correct symmetry of packing, in which the domains are rotated with respect to each other by 180° in the experimental structure. By contrast, models obtained by knowledge-based methods, in which each domain is modeled very accurately but not rotated, resulted in incorrect packing. Two UNRES models of this target were featured by the assessors. Correct domain packing was also predicted by UNRES for the homologous target T0644, which has a similar structure to that of T0663, except that the two domains are not rotated. Predictions for two other targets, T0668 and T0684_D2, are among the best ones by global distance test score. These results suggest that our physics-based method has substantial predictive power. In particular, it has the ability to predict domain-domain orientations, which is a significant advance in the state of the art.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Moleculares , Proteínas/química , Fenómenos Biofísicos , Humanos , Conformación Proteica , Pliegue de Proteína , Dominios y Motivos de Interacción de Proteínas
19.
Proteins ; 83(2): 282-99, 2015 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25412765

RESUMEN

The 70 kDa heat shock proteins (Hsp70) are a family of molecular chaperones involved in protein folding, aggregate prevention, and protein disaggregation. They consist of the substrate-binding domain (SBD) that binds client substrates, and the nucleotide-binding domain (NBD), whose cycles of nucleotide hydrolysis and exchange underpin the activity of the chaperone. To characterize the structure-function relationships that link the binding state of the NBD to its conformational behavior, we analyzed the dynamics of the NBD of the Hsp70 chaperone from Bos taurus (PDB 3C7N:B) by all-atom canonical molecular dynamics simulations. It was found that essential motions within the NBD fall into three major classes: the mutual class, reflecting tendencies common to all binding states, and the ADP- and ATP-unique classes, which reflect conformational trends that are unique to either the ADP- or ATP-bound states, respectively. "Mutual" class motions generally describe "in-plane" and/or "out-of-plane" (scissor-like) rotation of the subdomains within the NBD. This result is consistent with experimental nuclear magnetic resonance data on the NBD. The "unique" class motions target specific regions on the NBD, usually surface loops or sites involved in nucleotide binding and are, therefore, expected to be involved in allostery and signal transmission. For all classes, and especially for those of the "unique" type, regions of enhanced mobility can be identified; these are termed "hot spots," and their locations generally parallel those found by NMR spectroscopy. The presence of magnesium and potassium cations in the nucleotide-binding pocket was also found to influence the dynamics of the NBD significantly.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas HSP70 de Choque Térmico/química , Adenosina Difosfato/química , Adenosina Trifosfato/química , Animales , Apoproteínas/química , Dominio Catalítico , Bovinos , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Análisis de Componente Principal , Unión Proteica
20.
Proteins ; 83(8): 1414-26, 2015 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25973573

RESUMEN

The iron-sulfur protein 1 (Isu1) and the J-type co-chaperone Jac1 from yeast are part of a huge ATP-dependent system, and both interact with Hsp70 chaperones. Interaction of Isu1 and Jac1 is a part of the iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis system in mitochondria. In this study, the structure and dynamics of the yeast Isu1-Jac1 complex has been modeled. First, the complete structure of Isu1 was obtained by homology modeling using the I-TASSER server and YASARA software and thereafter tested for stability in the all-atom force field AMBER. Then, the known experimental structure of Jac1 was adopted to obtain initial models of the Isu1-Jac1 complex by using the ZDOCK server for global and local docking and the AutoDock software for local docking. Three most probable models were subsequently subjected to the coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations with the UNRES force field to obtain the final structures of the complex. In the most probable model, Isu1 binds to the left face of the Γ-shaped Jac1 molecule by the ß-sheet section of Isu1. Residues L105 , L109 , and Y163 of Jac1 have been assessed by mutation studies to be essential for binding (Ciesielski et al., J Mol Biol 2012; 417:1-12). These residues were also found, by UNRES/molecular dynamics simulations, to be involved in strong interactions between Isu1 and Jac1 in the complex. Moreover, N(95), T(98), P(102), H(112), V(159), L(167), and A(170) of Jac1, not yet tested experimentally, were also found to be important in binding.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas Hierro-Azufre/química , Proteínas Hierro-Azufre/metabolismo , Proteínas Mitocondriales/química , Proteínas Mitocondriales/metabolismo , Chaperonas Moleculares/química , Chaperonas Moleculares/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/química , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Unión Proteica
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