Monte Carlo Simulations of HIV Capsid Protein Homodimer.
J Chem Inf Model
; 55(7): 1361-8, 2015 Jul 27.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-26107886
Capsid protein (CA) is the building block of virus coats. To help understand how the HIV CA proteins self-organize into large assemblies of various shapes, we aim to computationally evaluate the binding affinity and interfaces in a CA homodimer. We model the N- and C-terminal domains (NTD and CTD) of the CA as rigid bodies and treat the five-residue loop between the two domains as a flexible linker. We adopt a transferrable residue-level coarse-grained energy function to describe the interactions between the protein domains. In seven extensive Monte Carlo simulations with different volumes, a large number of binding/unbinding transitions between the two CA proteins are observed, thus allowing a reliable estimation of the equilibrium probabilities for the dimeric vs monomeric forms. The obtained dissociation constant for the CA homodimer from our simulations, 20-25 µM, is in reasonable agreement with experimental measurement. A wide range of binding interfaces, primarily between the NTDs, are identified in the simulations. Although some observed bound structures here closely resemble the major binding interfaces in the capsid assembly, they are statistically insignificant in our simulation trajectories. Our results suggest that although the general purpose energy functions adopted here could reasonably reproduce the overall binding affinity for the CA homodimer, further adjustment would be needed to accurately represent the relative strength of individual binding interfaces.
Texto completo:
1
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Método de Monte Carlo
/
HIV
/
Proteínas do Capsídeo
/
Multimerização Proteica
Tipo de estudo:
Health_economic_evaluation
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2015
Tipo de documento:
Article