4.4 Article

Calibration of the dianionic phosphate group: Validation on the recognition site of the homodimeric enzyme phosphoglucose isomerase

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 41, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcc.26134

Keywords

dianionic phosphate; phosphoglucose isomerase dimer; biosensor; ab initio quantum chemistry; polarizable molecular mechanics

Funding

  1. Grand Equipement National de Calcul Intensif (GENCI), Institut du Developpement et des Ressources en Informatique Scientifique (IDRIS), Centre Informatique de l'Enseignement Superieur (CINES, France) [x2009-075009]
  2. Centre Regional Informatique et d'Applications numeriques de Normandie (CRIANN, Rouen, France) [1998053]

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We calibrate and validate the parameters necessary to represent the dianionic phosphate group (DPG) in molecular mechanics. DPG is an essential fragment of signaling biological molecules and protein-binding ligands. It is a constitutive fragment of biosensors, which bind to the dimer interface of phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI), an intracellular enzyme involved in sugar metabolism, as well as an extracellular protein known as autocrine motility factor (AMF) closely related to metastasis formation. Our long-term objective is to design DPG-based biosensors with enhanced affinities for AMF/PGI cancer biomarker in blood. Molecular dynamics with polarizable potentials could be used toward this aim. This requires to first evaluate the accuracy of such potentials upon representing the interactions of DPG with its PGI ligands and tightly bound water molecules. Such evaluations are done by comparisons with high-level ab initio quantum chemistry (QC) calculations. We focus on the Sum of Interactions Between Fragments Ab initio computed (SIBFA) polarizable molecular mechanics procedure. We present first the results of the DPG calibration. This is followed by comparisons between Delta E(SIBFA) and Delta E(QC) regarding bi-molecular complexes of DPG with the main-chain and side-chain PGI residues, which bind to it in the recognition site. We then consider DPG complexes with an increasing number of PGI residues. The largest QC complexes encompass the entirety of the recognition site, with six structural water molecules totaling up to 211 atoms. A persistent and satisfactory agreement could be shown between Delta E(SIBFA) and Delta E(QC). These validations constitute an essential first step toward large-scale molecular dynamics simulations of DPG-based biosensors bound at the PGI dimer interface. (c) 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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