4.7 Article

Calculating Transfer Entropy from Variance-Covariance Matrices Provides Insight into Allosteric Communication in ERK2

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 3168-3177

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.1c00004

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institutional Development Award (IDeA) from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [P20GM103442]

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A new method for estimating transfer entropy in biomolecular systems was developed by analyzing the variance-covariance matrix of atomic fluctuations. The results showed systematic consistency of the method for calculating transfer entropy and provided insights into the interconnected residue networks in proteins. Additionally, evidence of possible allosteric activity and different paths of activation in mutants were presented, highlighting the important role of transfer entropy analysis in understanding allosteric behavior.
We develop an approach by which reliable estimates of the transfer entropy can be obtained from the variance-covariance matrix of atomic fluctuations, which converges quickly and retains sensitivity to the full chemical profile of the biomolecular system. We validate our method on ERK2, a well-studied kinase involved in the MAPK signaling cascade for which considerable computational, experimental, and mutation data are available. We present the results of transfer entropy analysis on data obtained from molecular dynamics simulations of wild-type active and inactive ERK2, along with mutants Q103A, I84A, L73P, and G83A. We show that our method is systematically consistent within the context of other approaches for calculating transfer entropy, and we provide a method for interpreting networks of interconnected residues in the protein from a perspective of allosteric coupling. We introduce new insights about possible allosteric activity of the extreme N-terminal region of the kinase, and we describe evidence that suggests that activation may occur by different paths or routes in different mutants. Our results highlight systematic advantages and disadvantages of each method for calculating transfer entropy and show the important role of transfer entropy analysis for understanding allosteric behavior in biomolecular systems.

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