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How Native and Non-Native Cations Bind and Modulate the Properties of GTP/ATP.

Todor M DudevCédric GrauffelShang-Te Danny HsuCarmay Lim
Published in: Journal of chemical theory and computation (2018)
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and guanosine triphosphate (GTP) exist in physiological solution mostly bound to cations. Interestingly, their cellular Mg2+-bound forms have been shown to bind Li+, a first-line drug for bipolar disorder. However, solution structures of NTP/NDP (N = A or G) bound to Li+ and/or Mg2+ have not been solved, thus precluding knowledge of how the native Mg2+-bound cofactor conformation changes upon binding non-native Li+ and/or switching its environment from aqueous solution to proteins. Using well-calibrated methods that reproduce experimental structural and thermodynamic parameters of several Mg2+/Li+-nucleotide complexes, we show that the native NTP/NDP-Mg2+ cofactor adopts a "folded" conformation in water that remains unperturbed upon Li+ binding. We further show that the ATP-binding pockets of receptors such as P2X are complementary in shape to the "folded" ATP-Mg2+ solution structure, whereas the elongated GTP-binding pockets found in G-proteins necessitate the GTP-Mg2+ cofactor to undergo a conformational change from its "folded" conformation in solution to an extended one upon G-protein binding. Implications of the findings on how Li+, in its bound state, can manifest its therapeutic effects are discussed.
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