Molecular dynamics simulations in solvent of the glucocorticoid receptor protein in complex with a glucocorticoid response element DNA sequence.

Autor: Harris LF; Abbott Northwestern Hospital Cancer Research Laboratory, Minneapolis, MN 55407., Sullivan MR, Popken-Harris PD, Hickok DF
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Journal of biomolecular structure & dynamics [J Biomol Struct Dyn] 1994 Oct; Vol. 12 (2), pp. 249-70.
DOI: 10.1080/07391102.1994.10508740
Abstrakt: We investigated protein/DNA interactions, using molecular dynamics simulations computed in solvent, between the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) DNA binding domain (DBD) amino acids and DNA of a glucocorticoid receptor response element (GRE). We compared findings obtained from a fully solvated 80 Angstrom water droplet GR DBD/GRE model with those from a 10 Angstrom water layer GR DBD/GRE model. Hydrogen bonding interactions were monitored. In addition, van der Waals and electrostatic interaction energies were calculated. Molecular dynamics simulations from both models yielded similar findings; amino acids of the GR DBD DNA recognition helix formed both direct and water mediated hydrogen bonds at cognate codon/anticodon nucleotide base sites within the GRE right major groove halfsite. Likewise GR DBD amino acids in a beta strand structure adjacent to the DNA recognition helix formed both direct and water mediated hydrogen bonds at cognate codon/anticodon nucleotide base and backbone sites. We also investigated protein/DNA interactions with a 10 Angstrom water layer model consisting of the same GR DBD as above but with a predicted alpha helix attached to the carboxyl terminus of the GR DBD docked at the same GRE as above with additional flanking nucleotides. In this model, the interactions between amino acids of the DNA recognition helix and beta strand and nucleotides within the GRE right major groove halfsite were at cognate codon/anticodon nucleotide sites as found in the two models above. In addition, amino acids within the predicted alpha helix located on the carboxyl terminus of the GR DBD interacted at codon/anticodon nucleotide sites on the DNA backbone of the GRE flanking nucleotides. These interactions together induced breakage of Watson-Crick nucleotide base pairing hydrogen bonds, resulting in bending of the DNA, strand elongation and unwinding events similar to those described for helicases.
Databáze: MEDLINE