The biological function of large macromolecular assemblies depends on their structure and their dynamics over a broad range of timescales; for this reason, it is a significant challenge to investigate these assemblies using conventional experimental techniques. One of the most promising experimental techniques is hydrogen-deuterium exchange detected by mass spectrometry. Here, we describe to our knowledge a new computational method for quantitative interpretation of deuterium exchange kinetics and apply it to a hexameric viral helicase P4 that unwinds and translocates RNA into a virus capsid at the expense of ATP hydrolysis. Room-temperature dynamics probed by a hundred nanoseconds of all-atom molecular dynamics simulations is sufficient to predict the exchange kinetics of most sequence fragments and provide a residue-level interpretation of the low-resolution experimental results. The strategy presented here is also a valuable tool to validate experimental data, e.g., assignments, and to probe mechanisms that cannot be observed by x-ray crystallography, or that occur over timescales longer than those that can be realistically simulated, such as the opening of the hexameric ring. © 2014 The Authors.

Radou G., Dreyer F.N., Tuma R., Paci E. (2014). Functional dynamics of hexameric helicase probed by hydrogen exchange and simulation. BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 107(4), 983-990 [10.1016/j.bpj.2014.06.039].

Functional dynamics of hexameric helicase probed by hydrogen exchange and simulation

Paci E.
2014

Abstract

The biological function of large macromolecular assemblies depends on their structure and their dynamics over a broad range of timescales; for this reason, it is a significant challenge to investigate these assemblies using conventional experimental techniques. One of the most promising experimental techniques is hydrogen-deuterium exchange detected by mass spectrometry. Here, we describe to our knowledge a new computational method for quantitative interpretation of deuterium exchange kinetics and apply it to a hexameric viral helicase P4 that unwinds and translocates RNA into a virus capsid at the expense of ATP hydrolysis. Room-temperature dynamics probed by a hundred nanoseconds of all-atom molecular dynamics simulations is sufficient to predict the exchange kinetics of most sequence fragments and provide a residue-level interpretation of the low-resolution experimental results. The strategy presented here is also a valuable tool to validate experimental data, e.g., assignments, and to probe mechanisms that cannot be observed by x-ray crystallography, or that occur over timescales longer than those that can be realistically simulated, such as the opening of the hexameric ring. © 2014 The Authors.
2014
Radou G., Dreyer F.N., Tuma R., Paci E. (2014). Functional dynamics of hexameric helicase probed by hydrogen exchange and simulation. BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 107(4), 983-990 [10.1016/j.bpj.2014.06.039].
Radou G.; Dreyer F.N.; Tuma R.; Paci E.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/885182
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