Functional protein dynamics in a crystal.
Eugene KlyshkoJustin Sung-Ho KimLauren McGoughVictoria ValeevaEthan LeeRama RanganathanSarah RauscherPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Proteins are molecular machines and to understand how they work, we need to understand how they move. New pump-probe time-resolved X-ray diffraction methods open up ways to initiate and observe protein motions with atomistic detail in crystals on biologically relevant timescales. However, practical limitations of these experiments demands parallel development of effective molecular dynamics approaches to accelerate progress and extract meaning. Here, we establish robust and accurate methods for simulating dynamics in protein crystals, a nontrivial process requiring careful attention to equilibration, environmental composition, and choice of force fields. With more than seven milliseconds of sampling of a single chain, we identify critical factors controlling agreement between simulation and experiments and show that simulated motions recapitulate ligand-induced conformational changes. This work enables a virtuous cycle between simulation and experiments for visualizing and understanding the basic functional motions of proteins.
Keyphrases
- molecular dynamics
- protein protein
- single molecule
- density functional theory
- amino acid
- molecular dynamics simulations
- high resolution
- oxidative stress
- living cells
- binding protein
- magnetic resonance imaging
- diabetic rats
- magnetic resonance
- risk assessment
- small molecule
- climate change
- mass spectrometry
- advanced cancer
- fluorescent probe
- dual energy