4.8 Article

Benchmarking all-atom simulations using hydrogen exchange

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1404213111

Keywords

molecular dynamics; unfolded state; denatured states; HX; protein folding

Funding

  1. National Institutes of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) Research Grant [R01 GM055694]
  2. National Science Foundation Grant [CHE-13630120]
  3. DOE [DEAC02-06CH11357]
  4. National Center for Research Resources Grant under National Institutes of Health [2P41RR008630-18]
  5. NIGMS Grant under National Institutes of Health [9 P41 GM103622-18]
  6. National Creative Research Initiatives (Center for Proteome Biophysics) of the National Research Foundation of Korea Grant [2011-0000041]
  7. National Research Foundation of Korea [2008-0061984] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)
  8. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  9. Division Of Chemistry [1363012] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Long-time molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are now able to fold small proteins reversibly to their native structures [Lindorff-Larsen K, Piana S, Dror RO, Shaw DE (2011) Science 334(6055): 517520]. These results indicate that modern force fields can reproduce the energy surface near the native structure. To test how well the force fields recapitulate the other regions of the energy surface, MD trajectories for a variant of protein G are compared with data from site-resolved hydrogen exchange (HX) and other biophysical measurements. Because HX monitors the breaking of individual H-bonds, this experimental technique identifies the stability and H-bond content of excited states, thus enabling quantitative comparison with the simulations. Contrary to experimental findings of a cooperative, all-or-none unfolding process, the simulated denatured state ensemble, on average, is highly collapsed with some transient or persistent native 2 degrees structure. The MD trajectories of this protein G variant and other small proteins exhibit excessive intramolecular H-bonding even for the most expanded conformations, suggesting that the force fields require improvements in describing H-bonding and backbone hydration. Moreover, these comparisons provide a general protocol for validating the ability of simulations to accurately capture rare structural fluctuations.

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