Interpretation of spectroscopic data using molecular simulations for the secondary active transporter BetP.

The Journal of General Physiology Pub Date : 2019-03-04 Epub Date: 2019-02-06 DOI:10.1085/jgp.201812111
Vanessa Leone, Izabela Waclawska, Katharina Kossmann, Caroline Koshy, Monika Sharma, Thomas F Prisner, Christine Ziegler, Burkhard Endeward, Lucy R Forrest
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Mechanistic understanding of dynamic membrane proteins such as transporters, receptors, and channels requires accurate depictions of conformational ensembles, and the manner in which they interchange as a function of environmental factors including substrates, lipids, and inhibitors. Spectroscopic techniques such as electron spin resonance (ESR) pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR), also known as double electron-electron resonance (DEER), provide a complement to atomistic structures obtained from x-ray crystallography or cryo-EM, since spectroscopic data reflect an ensemble and can be measured in more native solvents, unperturbed by a crystal lattice. However, attempts to interpret DEER data are frequently stymied by discrepancies with the structural data, which may arise due to differences in conditions, the dynamics of the protein, or the flexibility of the attached paramagnetic spin labels. Recently, molecular simulation techniques such as EBMetaD have been developed that create a conformational ensemble matching an experimental distance distribution while applying the minimal possible bias. Moreover, it has been proposed that the work required during an EBMetaD simulation to match an experimentally determined distribution could be used as a metric with which to assign conformational states to a given measurement. Here, we demonstrate the application of this concept for a sodium-coupled transport protein, BetP. Because the probe, protein, and lipid bilayer are all represented in atomic detail, the different contributions to the work, such as the extent of protein backbone movements, can be separated. This work therefore illustrates how ranking simulations based on EBMetaD can help to bridge the gap between structural and biophysical data and thereby enhance our understanding of membrane protein conformational mechanisms.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

二级活性转运体BetP的分子模拟光谱数据解释。
对动态膜蛋白(如转运蛋白、受体和通道)的机制理解需要对构象集合的准确描述,以及它们作为环境因素(包括底物、脂质和抑制剂)的功能而交换的方式。光谱技术,如电子自旋共振(ESR)脉冲电子电子双共振(PELDOR),也被称为双电子电子共振(DEER),为从x射线晶体学或低温电子显微镜获得的原子结构提供了补充,因为光谱数据反映了一个集合,可以在更多的天然溶剂中测量,不受晶格的干扰。然而,解释DEER数据的尝试经常受到结构数据差异的阻碍,这可能是由于条件、蛋白质动力学或附加的顺磁自旋标签的灵活性的差异而引起的。最近,EBMetaD等分子模拟技术已经开发出来,可以在施加最小可能偏差的情况下创建与实验距离分布匹配的构象集合。此外,有人提出,在EBMetaD模拟过程中,为匹配实验确定的分布而需要做的工作可以用作将构象状态分配给给定测量的度量。在这里,我们展示了这一概念在钠偶联转运蛋白BetP中的应用。由于探针、蛋白质和脂质双分子层都以原子细节表示,因此可以区分对工作的不同贡献,例如蛋白质骨干运动的程度。因此,这项工作说明了基于EBMetaD的排序模拟如何有助于弥合结构和生物物理数据之间的差距,从而增强我们对膜蛋白构象机制的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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