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Understanding the native fluctuations of protein cores

Invited

Abstract

Understanding how thermal fluctuations affect protein structure is essential for characterizing the energy landscape of proteins, as well as determining the response to amino acid mutations. Protein structures obtained from liquid-state NMR, unlike those from x-ray crystallography, provide a number of model structures that satisfy the experimental constraints. Using a database of high-quality, paired NMR and x-ray crystal structures, we have shown that there are important differences between NMR structures and those solved by x-ray crystallography including differences in the root-mean-square deviations of the core Cα atomic positions, identities of the core amino acids, and packing fractions of core residues. In this work, we carry out all-atom molecular dynamics simulations to study the fluctuating conformational dynamics of wildtype globular proteins, as well as mutants, in aqueous solvent at room temperature. We study the fluctuating conformations using several metrics including the radius of gyration Rg, packing fraction, and Cα atomic positions. We find that most often the MD simulations sample conformations that are representative of the NMR and x-ray conformations, but ~40% of the sampled structures are not consistent with the experimental structures, with larger Rg and lower packing fractions.

Presenters

  • Zhe Mei

    Yale University

Authors

  • Zhe Mei

    Yale University

  • John Treado

    Yale University

  • Zachary Levine

    Yale University, Department of Pathology, Yale University

  • Lynne Regan

    University of Edinburgh, Centre for Synthetic & Systems Biology, University of Edinburgh

  • Corey Shane O'Hern

    Yale University, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Yale University