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Molecular dynamics simulations of a beta-hairpin fragment of protein G: Balance between side-chain and backbone forces

  1. Author:
    Ma, B. Y.
    Nussinov, R.
  2. Author Address

    Nussinov R NCI, FCRDC, Intramural Res Support Program, SAIC,Lab Expt & Computat Biol Bldg 469,Rm 151 Frederick, MD 21702 USA NCI, FCRDC, Intramural Res Support Program, SAIC,Lab Expt & Computat Biol Frederick, MD 21702 USA Tel Aviv Univ, Sackler Fac Med, Sackler Inst Mol Med IL-69978 Tel Aviv Israel
    1. Year: 2000
  1. Journal: Journal of Molecular Biology
    1. 296
    2. 4
    3. Pages: 1091-1104
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    How is the native structure encoded in the amino acid sequence? For the traditional backbone centric view, the dominant forces are hydrogen bonds (backbone) and phi-psi propensity. The role of hydrophobicity is nonspecific. For the side-chain centric view, the dominant force of protein folding is hydrophobicity. In order to understand the balance between backbone and side-chain forces, we have studied the contributions of three components of a beta-hairpin peptide: turn, backbone hydrogen bonding and side-chain interactions, of a 16-residue fragment of protein G. The peptide folds rapidly and cooperatively to a conformation with a defined secondary structure and a packed hydrophobic cluster of aromatic side-chains. Our strategy is to observe the structural stability of the beta-hairpin under systematic perturbations of the turn region, backbone hydrogen bonds and the hydrophobic core formed by the side-chains, respectively. Ln our molecular dynamics simulations, the peptides are solvated. with explicit water molecules, and an all-atom force field (CFF91) is used. Starting from the original peptide (G41EWTYDDATKTFTVTE56), we carried out the following MD simulations. (1) unfolding at 350 K; (2) forcing the distance between the C-alpha atoms of ASP47 and LYS50 to be 8 Angstrom; (3) deleting two turn residues (Ala48 and Thr49) to form a beta-sheet complex of two short peptides, GEWTYDD and KTFTVTE; (4) four hydrophobic residues (W43, Y45, F52 and T53) are replaced by a glycine residue step-by-step; and (5) most importantly, four amide hydrogen atoms (T44, D46, T53, and T55, which are crucial for backbone hydrogen bonding), are substituted by fluorine atoms. The fluorination not only makes it impossible to form attractive hydrogen bonding between the two beta-hairpin strands, but also introduces a repulsive force between the two strands due to the negative charges on the fluorine and oxygen atoms. Throughout all simulations, we observe that backbone hydrogen bonds are very sensitive to the perturbations and are easily broken. Ln contrast, the hydrophobic core survives most perturbations. In the decisive test of fluorination, the fluorinated peptide remains folded under our simulation conditions (5 ns, 278 K). Hydrophobic interactions keep the peptide folded, even with a repulsive force between the beta-strands. Thus, our results strongly support a side-chain centric view for protein folding. (C) 2000 Academic Press. [References: 35]

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