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Hydrogen bond networks determine emergent mechanical and thermodynamic properties across a protein family

BACKGROUND: Gram-negative bacteria use periplasmic-binding proteins (bPBP) to transport nutrients through the periplasm. Despite immense diversity within the recognized substrates, all members of the family share a common fold that includes two domains that are separated by a conserved hinge. The hi...

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Autores principales: Livesay, Dennis R, Huynh, Dang H, Dallakyan, Sargis, Jacobs, Donald J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2533333/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18700034
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-153X-2-17
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author Livesay, Dennis R
Huynh, Dang H
Dallakyan, Sargis
Jacobs, Donald J
author_facet Livesay, Dennis R
Huynh, Dang H
Dallakyan, Sargis
Jacobs, Donald J
author_sort Livesay, Dennis R
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Gram-negative bacteria use periplasmic-binding proteins (bPBP) to transport nutrients through the periplasm. Despite immense diversity within the recognized substrates, all members of the family share a common fold that includes two domains that are separated by a conserved hinge. The hinge allows the protein to cycle between open (apo) and closed (ligated) conformations. Conformational changes within the proteins depend on a complex interplay of mechanical and thermodynamic response, which is manifested as an increase in thermal stability and decrease of flexibility upon ligand binding. RESULTS: We use a distance constraint model (DCM) to quantify the give and take between thermodynamic stability and mechanical flexibility across the bPBP family. Quantitative stability/flexibility relationships (QSFR) are readily evaluated because the DCM links mechanical and thermodynamic properties. We have previously demonstrated that QSFR is moderately conserved across a mesophilic/thermophilic RNase H pair, whereas the observed variance indicated that different enthalpy-entropy mechanisms allow similar mechanical response at their respective melting temperatures. Our predictions of heat capacity and free energy show marked diversity across the bPBP family. While backbone flexibility metrics are mostly conserved, cooperativity correlation (long-range couplings) also demonstrate considerable amount of variation. Upon ligand removal, heat capacity, melting point, and mechanical rigidity are, as expected, lowered. Nevertheless, significant differences are found in molecular cooperativity correlations that can be explained by the detailed nature of the hydrogen bond network. CONCLUSION: Non-trivial mechanical and thermodynamic variation across the family is explained by differences within the underlying H-bond networks. The mechanism is simple; variation within the H-bond networks result in altered mechanical linkage properties that directly affect intrinsic flexibility. Moreover, varying numbers of H-bonds and their strengths control the likelihood for energetic fluctuations as H-bonds break and reform, thus directly affecting thermodynamic properties. Consequently, these results demonstrate how unexpected large differences, especially within cooperativity correlation, emerge from subtle differences within the underlying H-bond network. This inference is consistent with well-known results that show allosteric response within a family generally varies significantly. Identifying the hydrogen bond network as a critical determining factor for these large variances may lead to new methods that can predict such effects.
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spelling pubmed-25333332008-09-11 Hydrogen bond networks determine emergent mechanical and thermodynamic properties across a protein family Livesay, Dennis R Huynh, Dang H Dallakyan, Sargis Jacobs, Donald J Chem Cent J Research Article BACKGROUND: Gram-negative bacteria use periplasmic-binding proteins (bPBP) to transport nutrients through the periplasm. Despite immense diversity within the recognized substrates, all members of the family share a common fold that includes two domains that are separated by a conserved hinge. The hinge allows the protein to cycle between open (apo) and closed (ligated) conformations. Conformational changes within the proteins depend on a complex interplay of mechanical and thermodynamic response, which is manifested as an increase in thermal stability and decrease of flexibility upon ligand binding. RESULTS: We use a distance constraint model (DCM) to quantify the give and take between thermodynamic stability and mechanical flexibility across the bPBP family. Quantitative stability/flexibility relationships (QSFR) are readily evaluated because the DCM links mechanical and thermodynamic properties. We have previously demonstrated that QSFR is moderately conserved across a mesophilic/thermophilic RNase H pair, whereas the observed variance indicated that different enthalpy-entropy mechanisms allow similar mechanical response at their respective melting temperatures. Our predictions of heat capacity and free energy show marked diversity across the bPBP family. While backbone flexibility metrics are mostly conserved, cooperativity correlation (long-range couplings) also demonstrate considerable amount of variation. Upon ligand removal, heat capacity, melting point, and mechanical rigidity are, as expected, lowered. Nevertheless, significant differences are found in molecular cooperativity correlations that can be explained by the detailed nature of the hydrogen bond network. CONCLUSION: Non-trivial mechanical and thermodynamic variation across the family is explained by differences within the underlying H-bond networks. The mechanism is simple; variation within the H-bond networks result in altered mechanical linkage properties that directly affect intrinsic flexibility. Moreover, varying numbers of H-bonds and their strengths control the likelihood for energetic fluctuations as H-bonds break and reform, thus directly affecting thermodynamic properties. Consequently, these results demonstrate how unexpected large differences, especially within cooperativity correlation, emerge from subtle differences within the underlying H-bond network. This inference is consistent with well-known results that show allosteric response within a family generally varies significantly. Identifying the hydrogen bond network as a critical determining factor for these large variances may lead to new methods that can predict such effects. BioMed Central 2008-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2533333/ /pubmed/18700034 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-153X-2-17 Text en Copyright © 2008 Livesay et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Livesay, Dennis R
Huynh, Dang H
Dallakyan, Sargis
Jacobs, Donald J
Hydrogen bond networks determine emergent mechanical and thermodynamic properties across a protein family
title Hydrogen bond networks determine emergent mechanical and thermodynamic properties across a protein family
title_full Hydrogen bond networks determine emergent mechanical and thermodynamic properties across a protein family
title_fullStr Hydrogen bond networks determine emergent mechanical and thermodynamic properties across a protein family
title_full_unstemmed Hydrogen bond networks determine emergent mechanical and thermodynamic properties across a protein family
title_short Hydrogen bond networks determine emergent mechanical and thermodynamic properties across a protein family
title_sort hydrogen bond networks determine emergent mechanical and thermodynamic properties across a protein family
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2533333/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18700034
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-153X-2-17
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