4.3 Article

Quantifying allosteric effects in proteins

Journal

PROTEINS-STRUCTURE FUNCTION AND BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 59, Issue 4, Pages 697-707

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/prot.20440

Keywords

allosteric regulation; protein dynamics; conformational distribution; design principles; ligand binding; protein activity; control points; Kullback-Leibler divergence; allosteric potential; rate divergence

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In allosteric regulation, protein activity is altered when ligand binding causes changes in the protein conformational distribution. Little is known about which aspects of protein design lead to effective allosteric regulation, however. To increase understanding of the relation between protein structure and allosteric effects, we have developed theoretical tools to quantify the influence of protein-ligand interactions on probability distributions of reaction rates and protein conformations. We define the rate divergence, (D) over bar (k), and the allosteric potential, (D) over bar (x), as the Kullback-Leibler divergence between either the reaction-rate distributions or protein conformational distributions with and without the ligand bound. We then define D. as the change in the conformational distribution of the combined protein/ligand system, derive D. in the harmonic approximation, and identify contributions from 3 separate terms: the first term, D-x(omega), results from changes in the eigenvalue spectrum; the second term, D-x(Delta x), results from changes in the mean conformation; and the third term, D-x(v), corresponds to changes in the eigen-vectors. Using normal modes analysis, we have calculated these terms for a natural interaction between lysozyme and the ligand tri-N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, and compared them with calculations for a large number of simulated random interactions. The comparison shows that interactions in the known binding-site are associated with large values of D-x(v). The results motivate using allosteric potential calculations to predict functional binding sites on proteins, and suggest the possibility that, in Nature, effective ligand interactions occur at intrinsic control points at which binding induces a relatively large change in the protein conformational distribution. Published 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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