Effective Simulations
of Gas Diffusion Through Kinetically
Accessible Tunnels in Multisubunit Proteins: O<sub>2</sub> Pathways
and Escape Routes in T-state Deoxyhemoglobin
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Abstract
The diffusion of small gases to special binding sites
within polypeptide
matrices pivotally defines the biochemical specificity and reactivity
of proteins. We investigate here explicit O<sub>2</sub> diffusion
in adult human hemoglobin (HbA) as a case study employing the recently
developed temperature-controlled locally enhanced sampling (TLES)
method and vary the parameters to greatly increase the simulation
efficiency. The method is carefully validated against standard molecular
dynamics (MD) simulations and available experimental structural and
kinetic data on ligand diffusion in T-state deoxyHbA. The methodology
provides a viable alternative approach to traditional MD simulations
and/or potential of mean force calculations for: (i) characterizing
kinetically accessible diffusion tunnels and escape routes for light
ligands in porous proteins; (ii) very large systems when realistic
simulations require the inclusion of multiple subunits of a protein;
and (iii) proteins that access short-lived conformations relative
to the simulation time. In the case of T-state deoxyHbA, we find distinct
ligand diffusion tunnels consistent with the experimentally observed
disparate Xe cavities in the α- and β-subunits. We identify
two distal barriers including the distal histidine (E7) that control
access to the heme. The multiple escape routes uncovered by our simulations
call for a review of the current popular hypothesis on ligand escape
from hemoglobin. Larger deviations from the crystal structure during
simulated diffusion in isolated α- and β-subunits highlight
the dampening effects of subunit interactions and the importance of
including all subunits of multisubunit proteins to map realistic kinetically
accessible diffusion tunnels and escape routes