Cascella Michele, Micheletti Cristian, Rothlisberger Ursula, Carloni Paolo
International School for Advanced Studies, INFM-DEMOCRITOS Modeling Center for Research in Atomistic Simulation, Via Beirut 2-4, 34014 Trieste, Italy.
J Am Chem Soc. 2005 Mar 23;127(11):3734-42. doi: 10.1021/ja044608+.
The biological function of the aspartic protease from HIV-1 has recently been related to the conformational flexibility of its structural scaffold. Here, we use a multistep strategy to investigate whether the same mechanism affects the functionality in the pepsin-like fold. (i) We identify the set of conserved residues by using sequence-alignment techniques. These residues cluster in three distinct regions: near the cleavage-site cavity, in the four beta-sheets cross-linking the two lobes, and in a solvent-exposed region below the long beta-hairpin in the N-terminal lobe. (ii) We elucidate the role played by the conserved residues for the enzymatic functionality of one representative member of the fold family, the human beta-secretase, by means of classical molecular dynamics (MD). The conserved regions exhibit little overall mobility and yet are involved into the most important modes of structural fluctuations. These modes influence the substrate-catalytic aspartates distance through a relative rotation of the N- and C-terminal lobes. (iii) We investigate the effects of this modulation by estimating the reaction free energy at different representative substrate/enzyme conformations. The activation free energy is strongly affected by large-scale protein motions, similarly to what has been observed in the HIV-1 enzyme. (iv) We extend our findings to all other members of the two eukaryotic and retroviral fold families by recurring to a simple, topology-based, energy functional. This analysis reveals a sophisticated mechanism of enzymatic activity modulation common to all aspartic proteases. We suggest that aspartic proteases have been evolutionarily selected to possess similar functional motions despite the observed fold variations.
来自HIV-1的天冬氨酸蛋白酶的生物学功能最近已与其结构支架的构象灵活性相关联。在此,我们采用多步骤策略来研究相同机制是否影响类胃蛋白酶折叠中的功能。(i)我们使用序列比对技术确定保守残基集。这些残基聚集在三个不同区域:靠近切割位点腔、在连接两个叶的四个β-折叠中以及在N端叶中长β-发夹下方的溶剂暴露区域。(ii)我们通过经典分子动力学(MD)阐明保守残基对折叠家族的一个代表性成员——人β-分泌酶的酶功能所起的作用。保守区域整体移动性很小,但却参与了最重要的结构波动模式。这些模式通过N端和C端叶的相对旋转影响底物催化天冬氨酸的距离。(iii)我们通过估计不同代表性底物/酶构象下的反应自由能来研究这种调节的影响。活化自由能受到大规模蛋白质运动的强烈影响,这与在HIV-1酶中观察到的情况类似。(iv)我们通过使用一种简单的基于拓扑的能量函数将我们的发现扩展到两个真核和逆转录病毒折叠家族的所有其他成员。该分析揭示了所有天冬氨酸蛋白酶共有的一种复杂的酶活性调节机制。我们认为,尽管观察到折叠变化,但天冬氨酸蛋白酶在进化上已被选择具有相似的功能运动。