Solving the Mechanism of Na+/H+ Antiporters Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations
abstract: Na+/H+ antiporters are vital membrane proteins for cell homeostasis, transporting Na+ ions in exchange for H+ across the lipid bilayer. In humans, dysfunction of these transporters are implicated in hypertension, heart failure, epilepsy, and autism, making them well-established drug target...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-408332018-06-22T03:08:02Z Solving the Mechanism of Na+/H+ Antiporters Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations abstract: Na+/H+ antiporters are vital membrane proteins for cell homeostasis, transporting Na+ ions in exchange for H+ across the lipid bilayer. In humans, dysfunction of these transporters are implicated in hypertension, heart failure, epilepsy, and autism, making them well-established drug targets. Although experimental structures for bacterial homologs of the human Na+/H+ have been obtained, the detailed mechanism for ion transport is still not well-understood. The most well-studied of these transporters, Escherichia coli NhaA, known to transport 2 H+ for every Na+ extruded, was recently shown to bind H+ and Na+ at the same binding site, for which the two ion species compete. Using molecular dynamics simulations, the work presented in this dissertation shows that Na+ binding disrupts a previously-unidentified salt bridge between two conserved residues, suggesting that one of these residues, Lys300, may participate directly in transport of H+. This work also demonstrates that the conformational change required for ion translocation in a homolog of NhaA, Thermus thermophilus NapA, thought by some to involve only small helical movements at the ion binding site, is a large-scale, rigid-body movement of the core domain relative to the dimerization domain. This elevator-like transport mechanism translates a bound Na+ up to 10 Å across the membrane. These findings constitute a major shift in the prevailing thought on the mechanism of these transporters, and serve as an exciting launchpad for new developments toward understanding that mechanism in detail. Dissertation/Thesis Dotson, David Lee (Author) Beckstein, Oliver (Advisor) Ozkan, Sefika B (Committee member) Ros, Robert (Committee member) Van Horn, Wade (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Biophysics Molecular physics Theoretical physics antiporters binding free energies membrane proteins molecular dynamics python research software eng 222 pages Doctoral Dissertation Physics 2016 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.40833 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2016 |
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English |
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Doctoral Thesis |
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Biophysics Molecular physics Theoretical physics antiporters binding free energies membrane proteins molecular dynamics python research software |
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Biophysics Molecular physics Theoretical physics antiporters binding free energies membrane proteins molecular dynamics python research software Solving the Mechanism of Na+/H+ Antiporters Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations |
description |
abstract: Na+/H+ antiporters are vital membrane proteins for cell homeostasis, transporting Na+ ions in exchange for H+ across the lipid bilayer. In humans, dysfunction of these transporters are implicated in hypertension, heart failure, epilepsy, and autism, making them well-established drug targets. Although experimental structures for bacterial homologs of the human Na+/H+ have been obtained, the detailed mechanism for ion transport is still not well-understood. The most well-studied of these transporters, Escherichia coli NhaA, known to transport 2 H+ for every Na+ extruded, was recently shown to bind H+ and Na+ at the same binding site, for which the two ion species compete. Using molecular dynamics simulations, the work presented in this dissertation shows that Na+ binding disrupts a previously-unidentified salt bridge between two conserved residues, suggesting that one of these residues, Lys300, may participate directly in transport of H+. This work also demonstrates that the conformational change required for ion translocation in a homolog of NhaA, Thermus thermophilus NapA, thought by some to involve only small helical movements at the ion binding site, is a large-scale, rigid-body movement of the core domain relative to the dimerization domain. This elevator-like transport mechanism translates a bound Na+ up to 10 Å across the membrane. These findings constitute a major shift in the prevailing thought on the mechanism of these transporters, and serve as an exciting launchpad for new developments toward understanding that mechanism in detail. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Physics 2016 |
author2 |
Dotson, David Lee (Author) |
author_facet |
Dotson, David Lee (Author) |
title |
Solving the Mechanism of Na+/H+ Antiporters Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations |
title_short |
Solving the Mechanism of Na+/H+ Antiporters Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations |
title_full |
Solving the Mechanism of Na+/H+ Antiporters Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations |
title_fullStr |
Solving the Mechanism of Na+/H+ Antiporters Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations |
title_full_unstemmed |
Solving the Mechanism of Na+/H+ Antiporters Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations |
title_sort |
solving the mechanism of na+/h+ antiporters using molecular dynamics simulations |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.40833 |
_version_ |
1718701326710341632 |