Matching Items (2)
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Description
Traditionally, allostery is perceived as the response of a catalytic pocket to perturbations induced by binding at another distal site through the interaction network in a protein, usually associated with a conformational change responsible for functional regulation. Here, I utilize dynamics-based metrics, Dynamic Flexibility Index and Dynamic Coupling Index to

Traditionally, allostery is perceived as the response of a catalytic pocket to perturbations induced by binding at another distal site through the interaction network in a protein, usually associated with a conformational change responsible for functional regulation. Here, I utilize dynamics-based metrics, Dynamic Flexibility Index and Dynamic Coupling Index to provide insight into how 3D network of interactions wire communications within a protein and give rise to the long-range dynamic coupling, thus regulating key allosteric interactions. Furthermore, I investigate its role in modulating protein function through mutations in evolution. I use Thioredoxin and β-lactamase enzymes as model systems, and show that nature exploits "hinge-shift'' mechanism, where the loss in rigidity of certain residue positions of a protein is compensated by reduced flexibility of other positions, for functional evolution. I also developed a novel approach based on this principle to computationally engineer new mutants of the promiscuous ancestral β-lactamase (i.e., degrading both penicillin and cephatoxime) to exhibit specificity only towards penicillin with a better catalytic efficiency through population shift in its native ensemble.I investigate how allosteric interactions in a protein can regulate protein interactions in a cell, particularly focusing on E. coli ribosome. I describe how mutations in a ribosome can allosterically change its associating with magnesium ions, which was further shown by my collaborators to distally impact the number of biologically active Adenosine Triphosphate molecules in a cell, thereby, impacting cell growth. This allosteric modulation via magnesium ion concentrations is coined, "ionic allostery''. I also describe, the role played by allosteric interactions to regulate information among proteins using a simplistic toy model of an allosteric enzyme. It shows how allostery can provide a mechanism to efficiently transmit information in a signaling pathway in a cell while up/down regulating an enzyme’s activity.
The results discussed here suggest a deeper embedding of the role of allosteric interactions in a protein’s function at cellular level. Therefore, bridging the molecular impact of allosteric regulation with its role in communication in cellular signaling can provide further mechanistic insights of cellular function and disease development, and allow design of novel drugs regulating cellular functions.
ContributorsModi, Tushar (Author) / Ozkan, Sefika (Thesis advisor) / Beckstein, Oliver (Committee member) / Vaiana, Sara (Committee member) / Ros, Robert (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
Barnase-Barstar is a protein complex that has a strong association constant. The purpose of this research is to investigate the effects of conformational fluctuations on protein-water interactions, resulting water-mediated interactions, and the binding free energy of the protein complex. Using all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, the sets of simulations for flexible

Barnase-Barstar is a protein complex that has a strong association constant. The purpose of this research is to investigate the effects of conformational fluctuations on protein-water interactions, resulting water-mediated interactions, and the binding free energy of the protein complex. Using all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, the sets of simulations for flexible and rigid proteins to identify the effects on water-mediated interactions were prepared for analysis. To analyze the properties and interactions that result in the strong association of the Barnase-Barstar protein complex, the molecular dynamics simulations were prepared. A thorough review of the GROMACS manual and completion of the GROMACS Lysozyme in Water tutorial was completed to understand the steps and commands to write and run molecular dynamics simulations. The preliminary data investigated the impact of water-mediated interactions on the solvation free energy in the Barnase-Barstar protein complex where the proteins are kept rigid. This was achieved by observing the change in solvation free energy with respect to separation distance. From the data obtained, it is concluded that solvent-mediated interactions do not contribute to the negative binding free energy. With increasing separation distance, the change in solvation free energy decreased. Therefore, thermodynamically, water-mediated interactions destabilize the protein complex, while the binding free energy is dominated by direct protein-protein interactions. The follow-up simulations of flexible proteins with controlled protein-protein separation distances, for which a fully automated simulation and analysis protocol has been prepared in this project, will allow us to quantify the impact of conformational fluctuations on water-mediated interactions and the binding free energy of the protein complex by comparison to the simulations of rigid proteins.
ContributorsJoshi, Mansi (Author) / Heyden, Matthias (Thesis director) / Sulc, Petr (Committee member) / Singharoy, Abhishek (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor)
Created2022-05