Kinase large-scale conformational rearrangement is an issue of enormous biological and pharmacological relevance. Atomistic simulations able to capture the dynamics and the energetics of kinase large-scale motions are still in their infancy. Here, we present a computational study in which the atomistic dynamics of the "open-to-closed" movement of the cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (CDK5) have been simulated. Simulations were carried out using a new sampling method that is able to find the lowest free-energy channel between an initial state and a final state. This large-scale movement has a two-step mechanism: first, the alphaC-helix rotates by approximately 45 degrees , allowing the interaction between Glu51 and Arg149; then the CDK5 activation loop refolds to assume the closed conformation. We have also estimated the free-energy profile associated with the global motion and identified a CDK5 intermediate, which could be exploited for drug-design purposes. Our new sampling method turned out to be well-suited for investigating at an atomistic level the energetics and dynamics of kinase large-scale conformational motions.

Protein conformational transitions: the closure mechanism of a kinase explored by atomistic simulations / Berteotti A.; Cavalli A.; Branduardi D.; Gervasio F. L.; Recanatini M.; Parrinello M.. - In: JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0002-7863. - STAMPA. - 131:(2009), pp. 244-250. [10.1021/ja806846q]

Protein conformational transitions: the closure mechanism of a kinase explored by atomistic simulations

CAVALLI, ANDREA;RECANATINI, MAURIZIO;
2009

Abstract

Kinase large-scale conformational rearrangement is an issue of enormous biological and pharmacological relevance. Atomistic simulations able to capture the dynamics and the energetics of kinase large-scale motions are still in their infancy. Here, we present a computational study in which the atomistic dynamics of the "open-to-closed" movement of the cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (CDK5) have been simulated. Simulations were carried out using a new sampling method that is able to find the lowest free-energy channel between an initial state and a final state. This large-scale movement has a two-step mechanism: first, the alphaC-helix rotates by approximately 45 degrees , allowing the interaction between Glu51 and Arg149; then the CDK5 activation loop refolds to assume the closed conformation. We have also estimated the free-energy profile associated with the global motion and identified a CDK5 intermediate, which could be exploited for drug-design purposes. Our new sampling method turned out to be well-suited for investigating at an atomistic level the energetics and dynamics of kinase large-scale conformational motions.
2009
Protein conformational transitions: the closure mechanism of a kinase explored by atomistic simulations / Berteotti A.; Cavalli A.; Branduardi D.; Gervasio F. L.; Recanatini M.; Parrinello M.. - In: JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0002-7863. - STAMPA. - 131:(2009), pp. 244-250. [10.1021/ja806846q]
Berteotti A.; Cavalli A.; Branduardi D.; Gervasio F. L.; Recanatini M.; Parrinello M.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/67385
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