4.5 Article

E9-Im9 Colicin DNase-Immunity Protein Biomolecular Association in Water: A Multiple-Copy and Accelerated Molecular Dynamics Simulation Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 112, Issue 51, Pages 16802-16814

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp8061543

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  3. National Institutes of Health
  4. San Diego Supercomputer Center
  5. Accelrys, Inc.,
  6. W. M. Keck Foundation
  7. National Biomedical Computational Resource
  8. Center for Theoretical Biological Physics

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Protein-protein transient and dynamic interactions underlie all biological processes. The molecular dynamics (MD) of the E9 colicin DNase protein, its Im9 inhibitor protein, and their E9-Im9 recognition complex are investigated by combining multiple-copy (MC) MD and accelerated MD (aMD) explicit-sol vent simulation approaches, after validation with crystal line-phase and solution experiments. Im9 shows higher flexibility than its E9 counterpart. Im9 displays a significant reduction of backbone flexibility and a remarkable increase in motional correlation upon E9 association. Im9 loops 23-31 and 54-64 open with respect to the E9-Im9 X-ray structure and show high conformational diversity. Upon association a large fraction (similar to 20 nm(2)) of E9 and Im9 protein surfaces become inaccessible to water. Numerous salt bridges transiently occurring throughout our six 50 ns long MC-MD simulations are not present in the X-ray model. Among these Im9 Glu31-E9 Arg96 and Im9 Glu41-Lys89 involve interface interactions. Through the use of 10 ns of Im9 aMD simulation, we reconcile the largest thermodynamic impact measured for Asp51Ala mutation with Im9 structure and dynamics. Lys57 acts as an essential molecular switch to shift Im9 surface loop towards an ideal configuration for E9 inhibition. This is achieved by switching Asp60-Lys57 and Asp62-Lys57 hydrogen bonds to Asp51-Lys57 salt bridge. E9-Im9 recognition involves shifts of conformational distributions, reorganization of intramolecular hydrogen bond patterns, and formation of new inter- and intramolecular interactions. The description of key transient biological interactions can be significantly enriched by the dynamic and atomic-level information provided by computer simulations.

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