828 research outputs found
The influence of geometry, surface character and flexibility on the permeation of ions and water through biological pores
A hydrophobic constriction site can act as an efficient barrier to ion and
water permeation if its diameter is less than the diameter of an ion's first
hydration shell. This hydrophobic gating mechanism is thought to operate in a
number of ion channels, e.g. the nicotinic receptor, bacterial mechanosensitive
channels (MscL and MscS) and perhaps in some potassium channels (e.g. KcsA,
MthK, and KvAP). Simplified pore models allow one to investigate the primary
characteristics of a conduction pathway, namely its geometry (shape, pore
length, and radius), the chemical character of the pore wall surface, and its
local flexibility and surface roughness. Our extended (ca. 0.1 \mu s) molecular
dynamic simulations show that a short hydrophobic pore is closed to water for
radii smaller than 0.45 nm. By increasing the polarity of the pore wall (and
thus reducing its hydrophobicity) the transition radius can be decreased until
for hydrophilic pores liquid water is stable down to a radius comparable to a
water molecule's radius. Ions behave similarly but the transition from
conducting to non-conducting pores is even steeper and occurs at a radius of
0.65 nm for hydrophobic pores. The presence of water vapour in a constriction
zone indicates a barrier for ion permeation. A thermodynamic model can explain
the behaviour of water in nanopores in terms of the surface tensions, which
leads to a simple measure of "hydrophobicity" in this context. Furthermore,
increased local flexibility decreases the permeability of polar species. An
increase in temperature has the same effect, and we hypothesise that both
effects can be explained by a decrease in the effective solvent-surface
attraction which in turn leads to an increase in the solvent-wall surface free
energy.Comment: Peer reviewed article appeared in Physical Biology
http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/1478-3975/1/1/005
Membrane-binding mechanism of the EEA1 FYVE domain revealed by multi-scale molecular dynamics simulations
Early Endosomal Antigen 1 (EEA1) is a key protein in endosomal trafficking and is implicated in both autoimmune and neurological diseases. The C-terminal FYVE domain of EEA1 binds endosomal membranes, which contain phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate (PI(3)P). Although it is known that FYVE binds PI(3)P specifically, it has not previously been described of how FYVE attaches and binds to endosomal membranes. In this study, we employed both coarse-grained (CG) and atomistic (AT) molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to determine how FYVE binds to PI(3)P-containing membranes. CG-MD showed that the dominant membrane binding mode resembles the crystal structure of EEA1 FYVE domain in complex with inositol-1,3-diphospate (PDB ID 1JOC). FYVE, which is a homodimer, binds the membrane via a hinge mechanism, where the C-terminus of one monomer first attaches to the membrane, followed by the C-terminus of the other monomer. The estimated total binding energy is ~70 kJ/mol, of which 50β60 kJ/mol stems from specific PI(3)P-interactions. By AT-MD, we could partition the binding mode into two types: (i) adhesion by electrostatic FYVE-PI(3)P interaction, and (ii) insertion of amphipathic loops. The AT simulations also demonstrated flexibility within the FYVE homodimer between the C-terminal heads and coiled-coil stem. This leads to a dynamic model whereby the 200 nm long coiled coil attached to the FYVE domain dimer can amplify local hinge-bending motions such that the Rab5-binding domain at the other end of the coiled coil can explore an area of 0.1 ΞΌm2 in the search for a second endosome with which to interact
Structure and dynamics of the membrane-bound cytochrome P450 2C9.
The microsomal, membrane-bound, human cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2C9 is a liver-specific monooxygenase essential for drug metabolism. CYPs require electron transfer from the membrane-bound CYP reductase (CPR) for catalysis. The structural details and functional relevance of the CYP-membrane interaction are not understood. From multiple coarse grained molecular simulations started with arbitrary configurations of protein-membrane complexes, we found two predominant orientations of CYP2C9 in the membrane, both consistent with experiments and conserved in atomic-resolution simulations. The dynamics of membrane-bound and soluble CYP2C9 revealed correlations between opening and closing of different tunnels from the enzyme's buried active site. The membrane facilitated the opening of a tunnel leading into it by stabilizing the open state of an internal aromatic gate. Other tunnels opened selectively in the simulations of product-bound CYP2C9. We propose that the membrane promotes binding of liposoluble substrates by stabilizing protein conformations with an open access tunnel and provide evidence for selective substrate access and product release routes in mammalian CYPs. The models derived here are suitable for extension to incorporate other CYPs for oligomerization studies or the CYP reductase for studies of the electron transfer mechanism, whereas the modeling procedure is generally applicable to study proteins anchored in the bilayer by a single transmembrane helix
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