4.8 Article

Diffuse Ions Coordinate Dynamics in a Ribonucleoprotein Assembly

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 21, Pages 9510-9522

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c04082

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [PHY-2019745, MCB-1915843]
  2. Northeastern University Research Computing
  3. Discovery Cluster
  4. C3DDB cluster

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Proper ionic concentrations are crucial for the functional dynamics of RNA and RNP assemblies. This study presents a model that quantifies the impact of diffuse ions on biomolecular assembly dynamics. The model accurately predicts the excess Mg2+ ions in RNA systems and reveals the direct influence of diffuse ions on the dynamics of a ribosome and tRNA molecules during translation.
Proper ionic concentrations are required for the functional dynamics of RNA and ribonucleoprotein (RNP) assemblies. While experimental and computational techniques have provided many insights into the properties of chelated ions, less is known about the energetic contributions of diffuse ions to large-scale conformational rearrangements. To address this, we present a model that is designed to quantify the influence of diffuse monovalent and divalent ions on the dynamics of biomolecular assemblies. This model employs all-atom (non-H) resolution and explicit ions, where effective potentials account for hydration effects. We first show that the model accurately predicts the number of excess Mg2+ ions for prototypical RNA systems, at a level comparable to modern coarse-grained models. We then apply the model to a complete ribosome and show how the balance between diffuse Mg2+ and K+ ions can control the dynamics of tRNA molecules during translation. The model predicts differential effects of diffuse ions on the free-energy barrier associated with tRNA entry and the energy of tRNA binding to the ribosome. Together, this analysis reveals the direct impact of diffuse ions on the dynamics of an RNP assembly.

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