4.7 Article

Transient Unfolding and Long-Range Interactions in Viral BCL2 M11 Enable Binding to the BECN1 BH3 Domain

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom10091308

Keywords

BCL2; BECN1; intrinsic disorder; transient folding; machine learning

Funding

  1. Argonne Laboratory Directed Research and Development Computing Expedition project
  2. NIH [NIH/NIGMS GM105978, R15 GM122035, R03 NS090939]
  3. National Science Foundation [MCB-1413525]
  4. Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC05-00OR22725]
  5. DOE Office of Science User Facility [DE-AC02-06CH11357]

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Viral BCL2 proteins (vBCL2s) help to sustain chronic infection of host proteins to inhibit apoptosis and autophagy. However, details of conformational changes in vBCL2s that enable binding to BH3Ds remain unknown. Using all-atom, multiple microsecond-long molecular dynamic simulations (totaling 17 mu s) of the murine gamma-herpesvirus 68 vBCL2 (M11), and statistical inference techniques, we show that regions of M11 transiently unfold and refold upon binding of the BH3D. Further, we show that this partial unfolding/refolding within M11 is mediated by a network of hydrophobic interactions, which includes residues that are 10 angstrom away from the BH3D binding cleft. We experimentally validate the role of these hydrophobic interactions by quantifying the impact of mutating these residues on binding to the Beclin1/BECN1 BH3D, demonstrating that these mutations adversely affect both protein stability and binding. To our knowledge, this is the first study detailing the binding-associated conformational changes and presence of long-range interactions within vBCL2s.

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