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Experiment and Simulation Reveal Residue Details for How Target Binding Tunes Calmodulin's Calcium-Binding Properties.

Jules NdePengzhi ZhangMelvin Neal WaxhamMargaret S Cheung
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2023)
We aim to elucidate the molecular mechanism of the reciprocal relation of calmodulin's (CaM) target binding and its affinity for calcium ions (Ca 2+ ), which is central to decoding CaM-dependent Ca 2+ signaling in a cell. We employed stopped-flow experiments and coarse-grained molecular simulations that learn the coordination chemistry of Ca 2+ in CaM from first-principle calculations. The associative memories as part of the coarse-grained force fields built on known protein structures further influence CaM's selection of its polymorphic target peptides in the simulations. We modeled the peptides from the Ca 2+ /CaM-binding domain of Ca 2+ /CaM-dependent kinase II (CaMKII), CaMKIIp (293-310) and selected distinctive mutations at the N-terminus. Our stopped-flow experiments have shown that the CaM's affinity for Ca 2+ in the bound complex of Ca 2+ /CaM/CaMKIIp decreased significantly when Ca 2+ /CaM bound to the mutant peptide (296-AAA-298) compared to that bound to the wild-type peptide (296-RRK-298). The coarse-grained molecular simulations revealed that the 296-AAA-298 mutant peptide destabilized the structures of Ca 2+ -binding loops at the C-domain of CaM (c-CaM) due to both loss of electrostatic interactions and differences in polymorphic structures. We have leveraged a powerful coarse-grained approach to advance a residue-level understanding of the reciprocal relation in CaM, that could not be possibly achieved by other computational approaches.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • protein kinase
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • density functional theory
  • wild type
  • single cell
  • stem cells
  • high resolution
  • single molecule
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation