Flagellar motor protein-targeted search for the druggable site of Helicobacter pylori .
Vaishnavi TammaraRuchika AngroverDisha SirurAtanu DasPublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2024)
The deleterious impact of Helicobacter pylori ( H. pylori ) on human health is contingent upon its ability to create and sustain colony structure, which in turn is dictated by the effective performance of flagella - a multi-protein rotary nanodevice. Hence, to design an effective therapeutic strategy against H. pylori , we here conducted a systematic search for an effective druggable site by focusing on the structure-dynamics-energetics-stability landscape of the junction points of three 1 : 1 protein complexes (FliF C -FliG N , FliG M -FliM M , and FliY C -FliN C ) that contribute mainly to the rotary motion of the flagella via the transformation of information along the junctions over a wide range of pH values operative in the stomach (from neutral to acidic). We applied a gamut of physiologically relevant perturbations in the form of thermal scanning and mechanical force to sample the entire quasi - and non-equilibrium conformational spaces available for the protein complexes under neutral and acidic pH conditions. Our perturbation-induced magnification of conformational distortion approach identified pH-independent protein sequence-specific evolution of precise thermally labile segments, which dictate the specific thermal unfolding mechanism of each complex and this complex-specific pH-independent structural disruption notion remains consistent under mechanical stress as well. Complementing the above observations with the relative rank-ordering of estimated equilibrium binding free energies between two protein sequences of a specific complex quantifies the extent of structure-stability modulation due to pH alteration, rationalizes the exceptional stability of H. pylori under acidic pH conditions, and identifies the pH-independent complex-sequence-segment-residue diagram for targeted drug design.
Keyphrases
- helicobacter pylori
- protein protein
- human health
- binding protein
- risk assessment
- helicobacter pylori infection
- molecular dynamics simulations
- single molecule
- gene expression
- climate change
- small molecule
- ionic liquid
- healthcare
- high speed
- quantum dots
- dna methylation
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- density functional theory
- electronic health record