The fold of calmodulin (CaM) consists of two globular domains connected by a helical segment (the linker), whose conformational properties play a crucial role for the protein's molecular recognition processes. Here we investigate the structural properties of the linker by performing a 11.5 ns molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of calcium-loaded human CaM in aqueous solution. The calculations are based on the AMBER force field. The calculated S2 order parameters are in good accord with NMR data: The structure of the linker in our simulations is much more flexible than that emerging from the Homo sapiens X-ray structure, consistently with the helix unwinding observed experimentally in solution. This process occurs spontaneously in a nanosecond timescale, as observed also in a very recent simulation based on the GROMOS force field. A detailed description of the mechanism that determines the linker unwinding is provided, in which electrostatic contacts between the two globular domains play a critical role. The orientation of the domains emerging from our MD calculations is consistent both with former X-ray scattering data and a recent NMR work. Based on our findings, a rationale for the experimentally measured entropy cost associated to binding to the protein's cellular partners is also given.

Unwinding the helical linker of calcium-loaded calmodulin: A molecular dynamics study

PASTORE, ANNALISA;
2005-01-01

Abstract

The fold of calmodulin (CaM) consists of two globular domains connected by a helical segment (the linker), whose conformational properties play a crucial role for the protein's molecular recognition processes. Here we investigate the structural properties of the linker by performing a 11.5 ns molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of calcium-loaded human CaM in aqueous solution. The calculations are based on the AMBER force field. The calculated S2 order parameters are in good accord with NMR data: The structure of the linker in our simulations is much more flexible than that emerging from the Homo sapiens X-ray structure, consistently with the helix unwinding observed experimentally in solution. This process occurs spontaneously in a nanosecond timescale, as observed also in a very recent simulation based on the GROMOS force field. A detailed description of the mechanism that determines the linker unwinding is provided, in which electrostatic contacts between the two globular domains play a critical role. The orientation of the domains emerging from our MD calculations is consistent both with former X-ray scattering data and a recent NMR work. Based on our findings, a rationale for the experimentally measured entropy cost associated to binding to the protein's cellular partners is also given.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/1106851
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