Comparative analysis of essential collective dynamics and NMR-derived flexibility profiles in evolutionarily diverse prion proteins |
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Authors: | Kolattukudy P Santo Mark Berjanskii David S Wishart Maria Stepanova |
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Institution: | 1.National Institute for Nanotechnology NRC; University of Alberta; Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;2.Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering; University of Alberta; Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;3.Department of Computing Sciences; University of Alberta; Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;4.Department of Biological Sciences; University of Alberta; Edmonton, Alberta, Canada |
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Abstract: | Collective motions on ns-µs time scales are known to have a major impact on protein folding, stability, binding and enzymatic efficiency. It is also believed that these motions may have an important role in the early stages of prion protein misfolding and prion disease. In an effort to accurately characterize these motions and their potential influence on the misfolding and prion disease transmissibility we have conducted a combined analysis of molecular dynamic simulations and NMR-derived flexibility measurements over a diverse range of prion proteins. Using a recently developed numerical formalism, we have analyzed the essential collective dynamics (ECD) for prion proteins from eight different species including human, cow, elk, cat, hamster, chicken, turtle and frog. We also compared the numerical results with flexibility profiles generated by the random coil index (RCI) from NMR chemical shifts. Prion protein backbone flexibility derived from experimental NMR data and from theoretical computations show strong agreement with each other, demonstrating that it is possible to predict the observed RCI profiles employing the numerical ECD formalism. Interestingly, flexibility differences in the loop between second b strand (S2) and the second a helix (HB) appear to distinguish prion proteins from species that are susceptible to prion disease and those that are resistant. Our results show that the different levels of flexibility in the S2-HB loop in various species are predictable via the ECD method, indicating that ECD may be used to identify disease resistant variants of prion proteins, as well as the influence of prion proteins mutations on disease susceptibility or misfolding propensity.Key words: prion proteins structural stability, molecular dynamics simulation, essential collective dynamics, protein dynamic domains, biomolecular NMR, rigid loop |
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