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Rotational Dynamics of Proteins from Spin Relaxation Times and Molecular Dynamics Simulations
Author(s) -
O. H. Samuli Ollila,
Harri Heikkinen,
Hideo Iwaï
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.8b02250
Subject(s) - rotational diffusion , relaxation (psychology) , molecular dynamics , anisotropy , brownian dynamics , protein dynamics , rotational dynamics , dynamics (music) , statistical physics , physics , brownian motion , moment of inertia , diffusion , spin (aerodynamics) , scaling , classical mechanics , chemical physics , molecule , thermodynamics , quantum mechanics , geometry , psychology , social psychology , mathematics , acoustics
Conformational fluctuations and rotational tumbling of proteins can be experimentally accessed with nuclear spin relaxation experiments. However, interpretation of molecular dynamics from the experimental data is often complicated, especially for molecules with anisotropic shape. Here, we apply classical molecular dynamics simulations to interpret the conformational fluctuations and rotational tumbling of proteins with arbitrarily anisotropic shape. The direct calculation of spin relaxation times from simulation data did not reproduce the experimental data. This was successfully corrected by scaling the overall rotational diffusion coefficients around the protein inertia axes with a constant factor. The achieved good agreement with experiments allowed the interpretation of the internal and overall dynamics of proteins with significantly anisotropic shape. The overall rotational diffusion was found to be Brownian, having only a short subdiffusive region below 0.12 ns. The presented methodology can be applied to interpret rotational dynamics and conformation fluctuations of proteins with arbitrary anisotropic shape. However, a water model with more realistic dynamical properties is probably required for intrinsically disordered proteins.

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