Entropy and Free Energy of a Mobile Loop Based on the Crystal Structures of the Free and Bound Proteins

A mobile loop changes its conformation from “open” (free enzyme) to “closed” upon ligand binding. The difference in the Helmholtz free energy, ΔFloop between these states sheds light on the mechanism of binding. With our “hypothetical scanning molecular dynamics” (HSMD-TI) method ΔFloop = Ffree − Fb...

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Main Authors: Hagai Meirovitch, Mihail Mihailescu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2010-08-01
Series:Entropy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/12/8/1946/
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spelling doaj-3389cc51dcdb45c6bf8c0376e5489c352020-11-24T21:06:10ZengMDPI AGEntropy1099-43002010-08-011281946197410.3390/e12081946Entropy and Free Energy of a Mobile Loop Based on the Crystal Structures of the Free and Bound ProteinsHagai MeirovitchMihail MihailescuA mobile loop changes its conformation from “open” (free enzyme) to “closed” upon ligand binding. The difference in the Helmholtz free energy, ΔFloop between these states sheds light on the mechanism of binding. With our “hypothetical scanning molecular dynamics” (HSMD-TI) method ΔFloop = Ffree − Fbound where Ffree and Fbound are calculated from two MD samples of the free and bound loop states; the contribution of water is obtained by a thermodynamic integration (TI) procedure. In previous work the free and bound loop structures were both attached to the same “template” which was “cut” from the crystal structure of the free protein. Our results for loop 287−290 of AcetylCholineEsterase agree with the experiment, ΔFloop~ −4 kcal/mol if the density of the TIP3P water molecules capping the loop is close to that of bulk water, i.e., Nwater = 140 − 180 waters in a sphere of a 18 Å radius. Here we calculate ΔFloop for the more realistic case, where two templates are “cut” from the crystal structures, 2dfp.pdb (bound) and 2ace.pdb (free), where Nwater = 40 − 160; this requires adding a computationally more demanding (second) TI procedure. While the results for Nwater ≤ 140 are computationally sound, ΔFloop is always positive (18 ± 2 kcal/mol for Nwater = 140). These (disagreeing) results are attributed to the large average B-factor, 41.6 of 2dfp (23.4 Å2 for 2ace). While this conformational uncertainty is an inherent difficulty, the (unstable) results for Nwater = 160 suggest that it might be alleviated by applying different (initial) structural optimizations to each template. http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/12/8/1946/absolute entropyfree energymobile loopligand binding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hagai Meirovitch
Mihail Mihailescu
spellingShingle Hagai Meirovitch
Mihail Mihailescu
Entropy and Free Energy of a Mobile Loop Based on the Crystal Structures of the Free and Bound Proteins
Entropy
absolute entropy
free energy
mobile loop
ligand binding
author_facet Hagai Meirovitch
Mihail Mihailescu
author_sort Hagai Meirovitch
title Entropy and Free Energy of a Mobile Loop Based on the Crystal Structures of the Free and Bound Proteins
title_short Entropy and Free Energy of a Mobile Loop Based on the Crystal Structures of the Free and Bound Proteins
title_full Entropy and Free Energy of a Mobile Loop Based on the Crystal Structures of the Free and Bound Proteins
title_fullStr Entropy and Free Energy of a Mobile Loop Based on the Crystal Structures of the Free and Bound Proteins
title_full_unstemmed Entropy and Free Energy of a Mobile Loop Based on the Crystal Structures of the Free and Bound Proteins
title_sort entropy and free energy of a mobile loop based on the crystal structures of the free and bound proteins
publisher MDPI AG
series Entropy
issn 1099-4300
publishDate 2010-08-01
description A mobile loop changes its conformation from “open” (free enzyme) to “closed” upon ligand binding. The difference in the Helmholtz free energy, ΔFloop between these states sheds light on the mechanism of binding. With our “hypothetical scanning molecular dynamics” (HSMD-TI) method ΔFloop = Ffree − Fbound where Ffree and Fbound are calculated from two MD samples of the free and bound loop states; the contribution of water is obtained by a thermodynamic integration (TI) procedure. In previous work the free and bound loop structures were both attached to the same “template” which was “cut” from the crystal structure of the free protein. Our results for loop 287−290 of AcetylCholineEsterase agree with the experiment, ΔFloop~ −4 kcal/mol if the density of the TIP3P water molecules capping the loop is close to that of bulk water, i.e., Nwater = 140 − 180 waters in a sphere of a 18 Å radius. Here we calculate ΔFloop for the more realistic case, where two templates are “cut” from the crystal structures, 2dfp.pdb (bound) and 2ace.pdb (free), where Nwater = 40 − 160; this requires adding a computationally more demanding (second) TI procedure. While the results for Nwater ≤ 140 are computationally sound, ΔFloop is always positive (18 ± 2 kcal/mol for Nwater = 140). These (disagreeing) results are attributed to the large average B-factor, 41.6 of 2dfp (23.4 Å2 for 2ace). While this conformational uncertainty is an inherent difficulty, the (unstable) results for Nwater = 160 suggest that it might be alleviated by applying different (initial) structural optimizations to each template.
topic absolute entropy
free energy
mobile loop
ligand binding
url http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/12/8/1946/
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