4.3 Article

Binding and release of cholesterol in the Osh4 protein of yeast

期刊

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/prot.22263

关键词

molecular simulation; molecular dynamics; oxysterol binding proteins; sterol transport; protein function; steered molecular dynamics

资金

  1. Intramural NIH HHS [Z01 HL001050-10, Z01 HL001027-25] Funding Source: Medline

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Sterols have been shown experimentally to bind to the Osh4 protein (a homolog of the oxysterol binding proteins) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae within a binding tunnel, which consists of antiparallel beta-sheets that resemble a beta-barrel and three a-helices of the N-terminus. This and other Osh proteins are essential for intracellular transport of sterols and ultimately cell life. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are used to study the binding of cholesterol to Osh4 at the atomic level. The structure of the protein is stable during the course of all MD simulations and has little deviation from the experimental crystal structure. The conformational stability of cholesterol within the binding tunnel is aided in part by direct or water-mediated interactions between the 3-hydroxyl (3-OH) group of cholesterol and Trp(46), Gln(96), Tyr(97), Asn(165), and/or Gln(181) as well as dispersive interactions with Phe(42), Leu(24), Leu(39), Ile(167), and Ile(203). These residues along with other nonpolar residues in the binding tunnel and lid contribute nearly 75% to the total binding energy. The strongest and most populated interaction is between Gin 96 and 3-OH with a cholesterol/Gln(96) interaction energy of -4.5 +/- 1.0 kcal/mol. Phe(42) has a similar level of attraction to cholesterol with -4.1 +/- 0.3 kcal/mol. A MD simulation without the N-terminus lid that covers the binding tunnel resulted in similar binding conformations and binding energies when compared with simulations with the full-length protein. Steered MD was used to determine details of the mechanism used by Osh4 to release cholesterol to the cytoplasm. Phe(42), Gln(96), Asn(165), Gln(181), Pro(211), and Ile(206) are found to direct the cholesterol as it exits the binding tunnel as well as Lys(109). The mechanism of sterol release is conceptualized as a molecular ladder with the rungs being amino acids or water-mediated amino acids that interact with 3-OH.

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