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Conformational flexibility and binding interactions of the G protein βγ heterodimer

✍ Scribed by Min-Sun Park; Alan V. Smrcka; Harry A. Stern


Book ID
105358178
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
739 KB
Volume
79
Category
Article
ISSN
0887-3585

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Previous NMR experiments on unbound G protein βγ heterodimer suggested that particular residues in the binding interface are mobile on the nanosecond timescale. In this work we performed nanosecond‐timescale molecular dynamics simulations to investigate conformational changes and dynamics of Gβγ in the presence of several binding partners: a high‐affinity peptide (SIGK), phosducin, and the GDP‐bound α subunit. In these simulations, the high mobility of GβW99 was reduced by SIGK, and it appeared that a tyrosine might stabilize GβW99 by hydrophobic or aromatic stacking interactions in addition to hydrogen bonds. Simulations of the phosducin‐Gβγ complex showed that the mobility of GβW99 was restricted, consistent with inferences from NMR. However, large‐scale conformational changes of Gβγ due to binding, which were hypothesized in the NMR study, were not observed in the simulations, most likely due to their short (nanosecond) duration. A pocket consisting of hydrophobic amino acids on Gα appears to restrict GβW99 mobility in the crystal structure of the Gαβγ? heterotrimer. The simulation trajectories are consistent with this idea. However, local conformational changes of residues GβW63, GβW211, GβW297, GβW332, and GβW339 were detected during the MD simulations. As expected, the magnitude of atomic fluctuations observed in simulations was greater for α than for the βγ subunits, suggesting that α has greater flexibility. These observations support the notion that to maintain the high mobility of GβW99 observed by solution NMR requires that the Gβ–α interface must open up on time scale longer than can be observed in nanosecond scale simulations. Proteins 2011. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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