Molecular dynamics simulations of hydrophobic collapse of ubiquitin

被引:0
|
作者
Alonso, DOV [1 ]
Daggett, V [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Med Chem, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
conformational sampling; folding pathways; hydrophobic collapse; molecular dynamics simulations;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Nine nonnative conformations of ubiquitin, generated during two different thermal denaturation trajectories, were simulated under nearly native conditions (62 degrees C). The simulations included all protein and solvent atoms explicitly, and simulation times ranged from 1-2.4 ns. The starting structures had alpha-carbon root-mean-square deviations (RMSDs) from the crystal structure of 4-12 Angstrom and radii of gyration as high as 1.3 times that of the native state. In all but one case. the protein collapsed when the temperature was lowered and sampled conformations as compact as those reached in a control simulation beginning from the crystal structure. In contrast, the protein did not collapse when simulated in a 60% methanal: water mixture. The behavior of the protein depended on the starting structure: during simulation of the most native-like starting structures (less than or equal to 5 Angstrom RMSD to the crystal structure) the RMSD decreased, the number of native hydrogen bonds increased, and the secondary and tertiary structure: increased. Intermediate starting structures (5-10 Angstrom RMSD) collapsed to the radius of gyration of the control simulation, hydrophobic residues were preferentially buried, and the protein acquired same native contacts. However, the protein did not refold. The least native starting structures (10-12 Angstrom RMSD) did not collapse as completely as the more native-like structures; instead, they experienced large fluctuations in radius of gyration and went through cycles of expansion and collapse. with improved burial of hydrophobic residues in successive collapsed states.
引用
收藏
页码:860 / 874
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Molecular dynamics simulations of BMP-2 adsorption on a hydrophobic surface
    Oliveira, A. F.
    Gemming, S.
    Seifert, G.
    MATERIALWISSENSCHAFT UND WERKSTOFFTECHNIK, 2010, 41 (12) : 1048 - 1053
  • [22] Hydrophobic Drying and Hysteresis at Different Length Scales by Molecular Dynamics Simulations
    Lei, Yajie
    Leng, Yongsheng
    LANGMUIR, 2012, 28 (06) : 3152 - 3158
  • [23] Molecular dynamics simulations study of nano bubble attachment at hydrophobic surfaces
    Jin, Jiaqi
    Dang, Liem X.
    Miller, Jan D.
    PHYSICOCHEMICAL PROBLEMS OF MINERAL PROCESSING, 2018, 54 (01): : 89 - 101
  • [24] Dynamics of hydrophobic solvation: Ultrafast X-ray absorption and molecular dynamics simulations
    Chergui, Majed
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2011, 242
  • [25] MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS SIMULATIONS OF VOID COLLAPSE IN SHOCKED MODEL-MOLECULAR SOLIDS
    MINTMIRE, JW
    ROBERTSON, DH
    WHITE, CT
    PHYSICAL REVIEW B, 1994, 49 (21): : 14859 - 14864
  • [26] Unraveling Hydrophobic Interactions at the Molecular Scale Using Force Spectroscopy and Molecular Dynamics Simulations
    Stock, Philipp
    Monroe, Jacob J.
    Utzig, Thomas
    Smith, David J.
    Shell, M. Scott
    Valtiner, Markus
    ACS NANO, 2017, 11 (03) : 2586 - 2597
  • [27] Pressure effects on the ensemble dynamics of ubiquitin inspected with molecular dynamics simulations and isotropic reorientational eigenmode dynamics
    Sgourakis, Nikolaos G.
    Day, Ryan
    McCallum, Scott A.
    Garcia, Angel E.
    BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2008, 95 (08) : 3943 - 3955
  • [28] Molecular dynamics simulations of human E3 ubiquitin ligase Parkin
    Qiu, Shi
    Zhu, Shun
    Xu, Shan
    Han, Yanyan
    Liu, Wen
    Zuo, Ji
    MOLECULAR MEDICINE REPORTS, 2017, 16 (04) : 4561 - 4568
  • [29] Comparison of reduced point charge models of proteins: Molecular Dynamics simulations of Ubiquitin
    Laurence Leherte
    Daniel P. Vercauteren
    Science China Chemistry, 2014, 57 : 1340 - 1354
  • [30] Insights into Uranyl Ion Binding to Ubiquitin from Molecular Modeling and Dynamics Simulations
    Lin, Ying-Wu
    Nie, Chang-Ming
    Liao, Li-Fu
    CHEMISTRY LETTERS, 2011, 40 (12) : 1330 - 1331