Study on the Dynamics of Influenza Hemagglutinin Based on Energy Landscape Theory

ORAL

Abstract

Hemagglutinin (HA2), a homotrimeric influenza surface protein crucial for membrane fusion, undergoes an drastic structural rearrangement during viral invasion of the host. X-ray crystallography shows that the pre- and post-fusion configurations have largely disparate secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures. Simulations allow us to explore the time-dependent high resolution structural information and function of HA2 dynamics. Here we use an approach based on energy landscape theory that combines the native information from both the starting and end points. Our simulation shows two key events in the conformational transition of HA2: The extension of its fusion peptides away from the viral membrane and the melting of its globular C-terminal portion. The similar timescale and a kinetic competition between these two events lead to two main pathways and generic kinetic intermediates during this transition. Through considering the biological context of HA, we test perturbations of the baseline model that are useful in understanding the robustness of our predictions and how they translate into the function of HA. The all-atom explicit solvent simulation is performed and convince the cracking phenomenon at the start of this protein dynamics.

Authors

  • Xingcheng Lin

    Rice University

  • Nathanial Eddy

    Rice University

  • Jeffrey Noel

    Rice University

  • Paul Whitford

    Northeastern University

  • Jianpeng Ma

    Baylor College of Medicine

  • Jose Onuchic

    Rice University