Molecular Interaction Mechanism of a 14-3-3 Protein with a Phosphorylated Peptide Elucidated by Enhanced Conformational Sampling
Author(s) -
Junichi Higo,
Takeshi Kawabata,
Ayumi Kusaka,
Kota Kasahara,
Narutoshi Kamiya,
Ikuo Fukuda,
Kentaro Mori,
Yutaka Hata,
Yoshifumi Fukunishi,
Haruki Nakamura
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of chemical information and modeling
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1549-960X
pISSN - 1549-9596
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00551
Subject(s) - chemistry , salt bridge , peptide , molecular dynamics , phosphorylation , alanine , umbrella sampling , ligand (biochemistry) , biophysics , intermolecular force , residue (chemistry) , receptor , stereochemistry , molecule , biochemistry , amino acid , computational chemistry , mutant , biology , organic chemistry , gene
Enhanced conformational sampling, a genetic-algorithm-guided multidimensional virtual-system coupled molecular dynamics, can provide equilibrated conformational distributions of a receptor protein and a flexible ligand at room temperature. The distributions provide not only the most stable but also semistable complex structures and propose a ligand-receptor binding process. This method was applied to a system consisting of a receptor protein, 14-3-3ε, and a flexible peptide, phosphorylated myeloid leukemia factor 1 (pMLF1). The results present comprehensive binding pathways of pMLF1 to 14-3-3ε. We identified four thermodynamically stable clusters of MLF1 on the 14-3-3ε surface and free-energy barriers among some clusters. The most stable cluster includes two high-density spots connected by a narrow corridor. When pMLF1 passes the corridor, a salt-bridge relay (switching) related to the phosphorylated residue of pMLF1 occurs. Conformations in one high-density spot are similar to the experimentally determined complex structure. Three-dimensional distributions of residues in the intermolecular interface rationally explain the binding constant changes resulting from the alanine mutation experiment for the residues. We also performed a simulation of nonphosphorylated peptide and 14-3-3ε, which demonstrated that the complex structure was unstable, suggesting that phosphorylation of the peptide is crucially important for binding to 14-3-3ε.
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