Bridging the Atomic and Coarse-Grained Descriptions of Collective Motions in Proteins.

Autor: Carnevale, Vincenzo, Micheletti, Cristian, Pontiggia, Francesco, Potestio, Raffaello
Zdroj: Multiscale Approaches to Protein Modeling; 2011, p159-178, 20p
Abstrakt: In proteins and enzymes the necessity that the native state is thermodynamically stable must be appropriately balanced by the capability of the structure to sustain conformational changes and efficiently interconvert among different functionally relevant conformers. This subtle equilibrium reverberates in the complexity of the free-energy landscape which is endowed by a variety of local minima of varying depth and breadth corresponding to the salient structural states of the molecules. In this chapter we will present some concepts and computational algorithms that can be used to characterize the internal dynamics of proteins and relate it to their ˵functional mechanics.″ We will apply these concepts to the analysis of a molecular dynamics simulation of adenylate kinase, a protein for which the structural rearrangement is known to be crucial for the accomplishment of its biological function. We will show that, despite the structural heterogeneity of the explored conformational ensemble, the generalized directions accounting for conformational fluctuations within and across the visited conformational substates are robust and can be described by a limited set of collective coordinates. Finally, as a term of comparison, we will show that in the case of HIV-1 Trans-Activator of Transcription (TAT), a naturally unstructured protein, the lack of any hierarchical organization of the free-energy minima results in a poor consistency of the essential dynamical spaces sampled during the dynamical evolution of the system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index