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Transient Non-native Hydrogen Bonds Promote Activation of a Signaling Protein
Author(s) -
Alexandra K. Gardino,
Janice Villali,
Aleksandr Kivenson,
Ming Lei,
Ce Feng Liu,
P.A. Steindel,
Elan Eisenmesser,
Wladimir Labeikovsky,
Magnus WolfWatz,
Michael W. Clarkson,
Dorothee Kern
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2009.11.022
Subject(s) - phosphorylation , biology , protein folding , molecular dynamics , protein dynamics , biophysics , signal transduction , folding (dsp implementation) , hydrogen bond , protein structure , transition (genetics) , energy landscape , biochemistry , chemistry , computational chemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , electrical engineering , engineering , gene
Phosphorylation is a common mechanism for activating proteins within signaling pathways. Yet, the molecular transitions between the inactive and active conformational states are poorly understood. Here we quantitatively characterize the free-energy landscape of activation of a signaling protein, nitrogen regulatory protein C (NtrC), by connecting functional protein dynamics of phosphorylation-dependent activation to protein folding and show that only a rarely populated, pre-existing active conformation is energetically stabilized by phosphorylation. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) dynamics, we test an atomic scale pathway for the complex conformational transition, inferred from molecular dynamics simulations (Lei et al., 2009). The data show that the loss of native stabilizing contacts during activation is compensated by non-native transient atomic interactions during the transition. The results unravel atomistic details of native-state protein energy landscapes by expanding the knowledge about ground states to transition landscapes.

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