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Flexibility of Binding Site is Essential to the Ca 2+ Selectivity in EF-Hand Calcium-Binding Proteins.

Rui LaiGuo-Hui LiQiang Cui
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
High binding affinity and selectivity of metal ions are essential to the function of metalloproteins. Thus, understanding the factors that determine these binding characteristics is of major interest for both fundamental mechanistic investigations and guiding of the design of novel metalloproteins. In this work, we perform QM cluster model calculations and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) free energy simulations to understand the binding selectivity of Ca 2+ and Mg 2+ in the wild-type carp parvalbumin and its mutant. While a nonpolarizable MM model (CHARMM36) does not lead to the correct experimental trend, treatment of the metal binding site with the DFTB3 model in a QM/MM framework leads to relative binding free energies (ΔΔ G bind ) comparable with experimental data. For the wild-type (WT) protein, the calculated ΔΔ G bind is ∼6.6 kcal/mol in comparison with the experimental value of 5.6 kcal/mol. The good agreement highlights the value of a QM description of the metal binding site and supports the role of electronic polarization and charge transfer to metal binding selectivity. For the D51A/E101D/F102W mutant, different binding site models lead to considerable variations in computed binding affinities. With a coordination number of seven for Ca 2+ , which is shown by QM/MM metadynamics simulations to be the dominant coordination number for the mutant, the calculated relative binding affinity is ∼4.8 kcal/mol, in fair agreement with the experimental value of 1.6 kcal/mol. The WT protein is observed to feature a flexible binding site that accommodates a range of coordination numbers for Ca 2+ , which is essential to the high binding selectivity for Ca 2+ over Mg 2+ . In the mutant, the E101D mutation reduces the flexibility of the binding site and limits the dominant coordination number of Ca 2+ to be seven, thereby leading to reduced binding selectivity against Mg 2+ . Our results highlight that the binding selectivity of metal ions depends on both the structural and dynamical properties of the protein binding site.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • binding protein
  • dna binding
  • molecular dynamics
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • quantum dots
  • small molecule
  • transcription factor
  • protein protein
  • artificial intelligence
  • solid state