Theoretical Studies on Proteins to Reveal the Mechanism of Their Folding and Biological Functions

The folding mechanism of several β-structures (e.g., β-hairpins and β-sheets) was studied using newly developed enhanced sampling methods along with MD simulations in all implicit solvent environments. The influence of different implicit solvent models on the folding simulation of β-structure was al...

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Main Author: Shao, Qiang
Other Authors: Gao, Yi Qin
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7395
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2009-12-73952013-01-08T10:41:45ZTheoretical Studies on Proteins to Reveal the Mechanism of Their Folding and Biological FunctionsShao, QiangB-hairpin foldingimplicit solvent modelsenhanced sampling methodsequence influencekinesinhand-over-hand mechanismanisotropic network modelLangevin mode analysisThe folding mechanism of several β-structures (e.g., β-hairpins and β-sheets) was studied using newly developed enhanced sampling methods along with MD simulations in all implicit solvent environments. The influence of different implicit solvent models on the folding simulation of β-structure was also tested. Through the analysis of the free energy landscape as the function of several suitable reaction coordinates, we observed that the folding of β-hairpins is actually a two-state transition. In addition, the folding free energy landscapes for those related hairpins indicate the apparent sequence dependence, which demonstrates different folding mechanisms of similar β-structures of varied sequence. We also found that the stability of backbone hydrogen bonds is determined by the turn sequence and the composition of hydrophobic core cluster in β-structures. Neither of these findings was reported before. The processive movement of kinesin was also studied at the mesoscopic level. We developed a simple physical model to understand the asymmetric hand-over-hand mechanism of the kinesin walking on the microtubule. The hand-over-hand motion of the conventional kinesin is reproduced in our model and good agreement is achieved between calculated and experimental results. The experimentally observed limping of the truncated kinesin is also perfectly described by our model. The global conformational change of kinesin heads (e.g., the power stroke of neck-linkers which works as lever-arms during the kinesin walking, the transition between open and closed states of the switch region of the nucleotide binding domain in each head induced by the nucleotide binding and release) was studied for both dimeric and monomeric kinesins using a coarse-grained model, anisotropic network model (ANM). At the same time Langevin mode analysis was used to study the solvent influence on the motions of the kinesin head mimicked by ANM. Additionally, the correlation between the neck-linker and the nucleotide binding site was also studied for dimeric and monomeric kinesins. The former shows the apparent correlation between two subdomains whereas the latter does not, which may explain the experimental observation that only the dimeric kinesin is capable of walking processively on the microtubule.Gao, Yi Qin2011-02-22T22:23:50Z2011-02-22T23:46:04Z2011-02-22T22:23:50Z2011-02-22T23:46:04Z2009-122011-02-22December 2009BookThesisElectronic Dissertationtextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7395en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic B-hairpin folding
implicit solvent models
enhanced sampling method
sequence influence
kinesin
hand-over-hand mechanism
anisotropic network model
Langevin mode analysis
spellingShingle B-hairpin folding
implicit solvent models
enhanced sampling method
sequence influence
kinesin
hand-over-hand mechanism
anisotropic network model
Langevin mode analysis
Shao, Qiang
Theoretical Studies on Proteins to Reveal the Mechanism of Their Folding and Biological Functions
description The folding mechanism of several β-structures (e.g., β-hairpins and β-sheets) was studied using newly developed enhanced sampling methods along with MD simulations in all implicit solvent environments. The influence of different implicit solvent models on the folding simulation of β-structure was also tested. Through the analysis of the free energy landscape as the function of several suitable reaction coordinates, we observed that the folding of β-hairpins is actually a two-state transition. In addition, the folding free energy landscapes for those related hairpins indicate the apparent sequence dependence, which demonstrates different folding mechanisms of similar β-structures of varied sequence. We also found that the stability of backbone hydrogen bonds is determined by the turn sequence and the composition of hydrophobic core cluster in β-structures. Neither of these findings was reported before. The processive movement of kinesin was also studied at the mesoscopic level. We developed a simple physical model to understand the asymmetric hand-over-hand mechanism of the kinesin walking on the microtubule. The hand-over-hand motion of the conventional kinesin is reproduced in our model and good agreement is achieved between calculated and experimental results. The experimentally observed limping of the truncated kinesin is also perfectly described by our model. The global conformational change of kinesin heads (e.g., the power stroke of neck-linkers which works as lever-arms during the kinesin walking, the transition between open and closed states of the switch region of the nucleotide binding domain in each head induced by the nucleotide binding and release) was studied for both dimeric and monomeric kinesins using a coarse-grained model, anisotropic network model (ANM). At the same time Langevin mode analysis was used to study the solvent influence on the motions of the kinesin head mimicked by ANM. Additionally, the correlation between the neck-linker and the nucleotide binding site was also studied for dimeric and monomeric kinesins. The former shows the apparent correlation between two subdomains whereas the latter does not, which may explain the experimental observation that only the dimeric kinesin is capable of walking processively on the microtubule.
author2 Gao, Yi Qin
author_facet Gao, Yi Qin
Shao, Qiang
author Shao, Qiang
author_sort Shao, Qiang
title Theoretical Studies on Proteins to Reveal the Mechanism of Their Folding and Biological Functions
title_short Theoretical Studies on Proteins to Reveal the Mechanism of Their Folding and Biological Functions
title_full Theoretical Studies on Proteins to Reveal the Mechanism of Their Folding and Biological Functions
title_fullStr Theoretical Studies on Proteins to Reveal the Mechanism of Their Folding and Biological Functions
title_full_unstemmed Theoretical Studies on Proteins to Reveal the Mechanism of Their Folding and Biological Functions
title_sort theoretical studies on proteins to reveal the mechanism of their folding and biological functions
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7395
work_keys_str_mv AT shaoqiang theoreticalstudiesonproteinstorevealthemechanismoftheirfoldingandbiologicalfunctions
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