Monje-Galvan Viviana, Klauda Jeffery B
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, College Park, MD 20742, USA; Biophysics Program, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
Biochim Biophys Acta. 2016 Jul;1858(7 Pt B):1584-93. doi: 10.1016/j.bbamem.2016.02.018. Epub 2016 Feb 20.
Experimental biology has contributed to answer questions about the morphology of a system and how molecules organize themselves to maintain a healthy functional cell. Single-molecule techniques, optical and magnetic experiments, and fluorescence microscopy have come a long way to probe structural and dynamical information at multiple scales. However, some details are simply too small or the processes are too short-lived to detect by experiments. Computational biology provides a bridge to understand experimental results at the molecular level, makes predictions that have not been seen in vivo, and motivates new fields of research. This review focuses on the advances on peripheral membrane proteins (PMPs) studies; what is known about their interaction with membranes, their role in cell biology, and some limitations that both experiment and computation still have to overcome to gain better structural and functional understanding of these PMPs. As many recent reviews have acknowledged, interdisciplinary efforts between experiment and computation are needed in order to have useful models that lead future directions in the study of PMPs. We present new results of a case study on a PMP that behaves as an intricate machine controlling lipid homeostasis between cellular organelles, Osh4 in yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Molecular dynamics simulations were run to examine the interaction between the protein and membrane models that reflect the lipid diversity of the endoplasmic reticulum and trans-Golgi membranes. Our study is consistent with experimental data showing several residues that interact to smaller or larger extent with the bilayer upon stable binding (~200 ns into the trajectory). We identified PHE239 as a key residue stabilizing the protein-membrane interaction along with two other binding regions, the ALPS-like motif and the β6-β7 loops in the mouth region of the protein. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Membrane Proteins edited by J.C. Gumbart and Sergei Noskov.
实验生物学有助于解答有关系统形态以及分子如何自我组织以维持健康功能细胞的问题。单分子技术、光学和磁性实验以及荧光显微镜技术在探测多尺度的结构和动力学信息方面已经取得了长足进展。然而,一些细节实在太小,或者过程过于短暂,以至于实验无法检测到。计算生物学为在分子水平理解实验结果提供了一座桥梁,做出了体内尚未观察到的预测,并推动了新的研究领域。本综述聚焦于外周膜蛋白(PMPs)研究的进展;我们对其与膜的相互作用、在细胞生物学中的作用以及实验和计算为更好地理解这些PMPs的结构和功能仍需克服的一些局限性有哪些了解。正如许多近期综述所承认的,为了拥有能引领PMPs研究未来方向的有用模型,实验和计算之间需要跨学科的努力。我们展示了一个关于PMP的案例研究的新结果,该PMP在酿酒酵母中作为一种控制细胞器间脂质稳态的复杂机器发挥作用,即Osh4。进行了分子动力学模拟,以研究该蛋白与反映内质网和反式高尔基体膜脂质多样性的膜模型之间的相互作用。我们的研究与实验数据一致,这些数据显示在稳定结合时(轨迹约200纳秒),有几个残基与双层膜有不同程度的相互作用。我们确定苯丙氨酸239是稳定蛋白 - 膜相互作用的关键残基,还有另外两个结合区域,即蛋白口部区域的类ALPS基序和β6 - β7环。本文是由J.C. Gumbart和Sergei Noskov编辑的名为《膜蛋白》的特刊的一部分。