Rotation and Self-Assembly Driving NLRP3 Activation.
Haochen XuZhong-Huai HouRongbin ZhouJie-Lou LiaoPublished in: Journal of chemical information and modeling (2024)
As a critical sensor protein, NLRP3 detects cellular perturbation caused by diverse exogenous and endogenous stimuli. NLRP3 activation requires domain rotation within the NEK7-bound NLRP3 monomer and assembly. However, a detailed molecular mechanism for NLRP3 assembly and activation remains elusive, particularly in terms of dynamics and energetics. In this work, all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are executed to describe large-amplitude closed-to-open conformational transitions along the rotational pathway. From the MD trajectories, the computed potential of mean force (PMF) shows that NLRP3 activation through monomeric domain rotation is an uphill process, during which the active conformation of the NLRP3-NEK7 monomer cannot be stabilized. Further binding free-energy calculations for two neighboring NLRP3-NEK7 subunits in a disc assembly with the C10 symmetry reveal that the protein self-assembly starts approximately at the 86.5° position on the rotary pathway, along which the NLRP3 activation becomes a downhill process to the active state at 90.5°. The active NLRP3-NEK7 monomeric conformation in the disc assembly is stabilized because of the interactions between the neighboring subunits, involving mainly FISNA loop 1 in one subunit and a "crocodile-clip" structure formed by the NBD helix-loop-strand motif (residues 351-373) and the WHD β-hairpin loop (residues 501-521) in the other. Our simulations also demonstrate that NEK7 plays an important role in the NLRP3 cage dissociation in the centrosome, which is consistent with biological experiments. The computational results provide kinetic, energetic, and structural insights into the molecular mechanisms of the activation of NLRP3 and the NEK7-driven dissociation of inactive NLRP3 cages. The activation mechanism of NLRP3 proposed in this work is significantly different from those of previous structural studies.