Investigation of Phosphorylation-Induced Folding of an Intrinsically Disordered Protein by Coarse-Grained Molecular Dynamics

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TitreInvestigation of Phosphorylation-Induced Folding of an Intrinsically Disordered Protein by Coarse-Grained Molecular Dynamics
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuteursSieradzan AK, Korneev A, Begun A, Kachlishvili K, Scheraga HA, Molochkov A, Senet P, Niemi AJ, Maisuradze GG
JournalJOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume17
Pagination3203-3220
Date PublishedMAY 11
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1549-9618
Résumé

Apart from being the most common mechanism of regulating protein function and transmitting signals throughout the cell, phosphorylation has an ability to induce disorder-to-order transition in an intrinsically disordered protein. In particular, it was shown that folding of the intrinsically disordered protein, eIF4E-binding protein isoform 2 (4E-BP2), can be induced by multisite phosphorylation. Here, the principles that govern the folding of phosphorylated 4E-BP2 (pT37pT46 4E-BP2(18-62)) are investigated by analyzing canonical and replica exchange molecular dynamics trajectories, generated with the coarse-grained united-residue force field, in terms of local and global motions and the time dependence of formation of contacts between Cas of selected pairs of residues. The key residues involved in the folding of the pT37pT46 4E-BP2(18-62) are elucidated by this analysis. The correlations between local and global motions are identified. Moreover, for a better understanding of the physics of the formation of the folded state, the experimental structure of the pT37pT46 4E-BP2(18-62) is analyzed in terms of a kink (heteroclinic standing wave solution) of a generalized discrete nonlinear Schrodinger equation. It is shown that without molecular dynamics simulations the kinks are able to identify not only the phosphorylated sites of protein, the key players in folding, but also the reasons for the weak stability of the pT37pT46 4E-BP2(18-62).

DOI10.1021/acs.jctc.1c00155