Exploring electrostatic patterns of human, murine, equine and canine TLR4/MD-2 receptors

Electrostatic interactions between phosphate anions and Toll-like receptor 4 / Myeloid differentiation factor-2 (TLR4/MD-2) protein complexes of human, murine, equine and canine species were computed. Such knowledge can provide mechanistic information about recognising LPS-like ligands, since anioni...

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Main Authors: Jorge Lozano-Aponte, Thomas Scior, Francisco Noé Mendoza Ambrosio, Minerva González-Melchor, Christian Alexander
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-07-01
Series:Innate Immunity
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1753425919894628
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spelling doaj-a42867ad239b44c48a3943af61663cd12020-11-25T04:08:22ZengSAGE PublishingInnate Immunity1753-42591753-42672020-07-012610.1177/1753425919894628Exploring electrostatic patterns of human, murine, equine and canine TLR4/MD-2 receptorsJorge Lozano-AponteThomas SciorFrancisco Noé Mendoza AmbrosioMinerva González-MelchorChristian AlexanderElectrostatic interactions between phosphate anions and Toll-like receptor 4 / Myeloid differentiation factor-2 (TLR4/MD-2) protein complexes of human, murine, equine and canine species were computed. Such knowledge can provide mechanistic information about recognising LPS-like ligands, since anionic phosphate groups belong to the structural features of LPS with their diphosphorylated diglucosamine backbone. Sequence composition analyses, electrostatic interaction potentials and docked energies as well as molecular dynamics studies evaluated the phosphate interactions within the triangular LPS binding site (wedge). According to electrostatic analyses, human, horse and dog wedges possess phosphate-binding sites with indistinct positive and negative charge distributions, but the murine wedge shows a unique strong negative net charge at the site where antagonists bind in other species (Pan). Docking of a phosphate mono-anion (probe) confirmed its repulsion at this Pan site, but the Pag site of the murine wedge attracted the probe. It is occupied by phosphate groups of agonists in other species (Pag). Molecular dynamics trajectories show a variable degree of random walk across the wedges, that is, not following electrostatic preferences (neither Pag nor Pan). In summary, two opposing electrostatic patterns exist –murine versus human, equine and canine species – all of which reflect the potential dual activity mode of under-acylated ligands such as lipid IV A .https://doi.org/10.1177/1753425919894628
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jorge Lozano-Aponte
Thomas Scior
Francisco Noé Mendoza Ambrosio
Minerva González-Melchor
Christian Alexander
spellingShingle Jorge Lozano-Aponte
Thomas Scior
Francisco Noé Mendoza Ambrosio
Minerva González-Melchor
Christian Alexander
Exploring electrostatic patterns of human, murine, equine and canine TLR4/MD-2 receptors
Innate Immunity
author_facet Jorge Lozano-Aponte
Thomas Scior
Francisco Noé Mendoza Ambrosio
Minerva González-Melchor
Christian Alexander
author_sort Jorge Lozano-Aponte
title Exploring electrostatic patterns of human, murine, equine and canine TLR4/MD-2 receptors
title_short Exploring electrostatic patterns of human, murine, equine and canine TLR4/MD-2 receptors
title_full Exploring electrostatic patterns of human, murine, equine and canine TLR4/MD-2 receptors
title_fullStr Exploring electrostatic patterns of human, murine, equine and canine TLR4/MD-2 receptors
title_full_unstemmed Exploring electrostatic patterns of human, murine, equine and canine TLR4/MD-2 receptors
title_sort exploring electrostatic patterns of human, murine, equine and canine tlr4/md-2 receptors
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Innate Immunity
issn 1753-4259
1753-4267
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Electrostatic interactions between phosphate anions and Toll-like receptor 4 / Myeloid differentiation factor-2 (TLR4/MD-2) protein complexes of human, murine, equine and canine species were computed. Such knowledge can provide mechanistic information about recognising LPS-like ligands, since anionic phosphate groups belong to the structural features of LPS with their diphosphorylated diglucosamine backbone. Sequence composition analyses, electrostatic interaction potentials and docked energies as well as molecular dynamics studies evaluated the phosphate interactions within the triangular LPS binding site (wedge). According to electrostatic analyses, human, horse and dog wedges possess phosphate-binding sites with indistinct positive and negative charge distributions, but the murine wedge shows a unique strong negative net charge at the site where antagonists bind in other species (Pan). Docking of a phosphate mono-anion (probe) confirmed its repulsion at this Pan site, but the Pag site of the murine wedge attracted the probe. It is occupied by phosphate groups of agonists in other species (Pag). Molecular dynamics trajectories show a variable degree of random walk across the wedges, that is, not following electrostatic preferences (neither Pag nor Pan). In summary, two opposing electrostatic patterns exist –murine versus human, equine and canine species – all of which reflect the potential dual activity mode of under-acylated ligands such as lipid IV A .
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1753425919894628
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