| Literature DB >> 19300489 |
Barry J Grant1, Alemayehu A Gorfe, J Andrew McCammon.
Abstract
Ras mediates signaling pathways controlling cell proliferation and development by cycling between GTP- and GDP-bound active and inactive conformational states. Understanding the complete reaction path of this conformational change and its intermediary structures is critical to understanding Ras signaling. We characterize nucleotide-dependent conformational transition using multiple-barrier-crossing accelerated molecular dynamics (aMD) simulations. These transitions, achieved for the first time for wild-type Ras, are impossible to observe with classical molecular dynamics (cMD) simulations due to the large energetic barrier between end states. Mapping the reaction path onto a conformer plot describing the distribution of the crystallographic structures enabled identification of highly populated intermediate structures. These structures have unique switch orientations (residues 25-40 and 57-75) intermediate between GTP and GDP states, or distinct loop3 (46-49), loop7 (105-110), and alpha5 C-terminus (159-166) conformations distal from the nucleotide-binding site. In addition, these barrier-crossing trajectories predict novel nucleotide-dependent correlated motions, including correlations of alpha2 (residues 66-74) with alpha3-loop7 (93-110), loop2 (26-37) with loop10 (145-151), and loop3 (46-49) with alpha5 (152-167). The interconversion between newly identified Ras conformations revealed by this study advances our mechanistic understanding of Ras function. In addition, the pattern of correlated motions provides new evidence for a dynamic linkage between the nucleotide-binding site and the membrane interacting C-terminus critical for the signaling function of Ras. Furthermore, normal mode analysis indicates that the dominant collective motion that occurs during nucleotide-dependent conformational exchange, and captured in aMD (but absent in cMD) simulations, is a low-frequency motion intrinsic to the structure.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19300489 PMCID: PMC2651530 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.475
Figure 1Conformational sampling in cMD and aMD simulations: projection of transient conformers onto the principal components obtained from analysis of Ras's crystallographic structures.
Crystallographic GTP conformers are colored red whilst GDP conformers are colored green. The distribution of MD conformers is depicted with density-shaded blue points. Each row corresponds to a single initial conformation, namely: (A–D) wtGTP, (E–H) wtGDP and (I–L) mutantGDP. cMD simulations are depicted in the two left panels (A, B, E, F, I, J) whilst aMD simulations are depicted in the two right panels (C, D G, H, K, L). Simulations were performed with bound GTP (A, C, E, G, I, K) and GDP (B, D, F, H, J, L). Inserts show distances between instantaneous trajectory conformations and the centroids of the main GTP and GDP crystal structure clusters in red and green respectively (see Methods for further details).
Figure 2Clustering of wild-type GTP with bound GDP (A–D) and wild-type GDP with bound GTP (E–H) aMD trajectories.
Front and back views of representative structures obtained from hierarchical clustering (A, B, E and F). In each case the most populated cluster representative is shown in black (representative of 30.26% and 28.56% of their respective trajectory conformers in each simulation), with subsequent clusters in yellow (23.22% and 27.91%), green (21.3% and 21.02%), pink (19.29% and 16.34%) and red (5.94% and 6.17%). PC projection plots with cluster ellipsoid hulls i.e. the ellipsoid of minimum volume such that points from a given cluster lie inside ellipsoid boundaries (C and G). Trajectory timeline colored according conformational cluster (D and H).
Trajectory cluster minimum RMSD from GDP, GTP A59G and Y32C crystal structure representatives.
| RMSD from Representative Crystal Structure | |||||
| System | Cluster No. | GTP | GDP | A59G | Y32C |
|
|
| 1.32 | 1.31 | 1.32 | 1.38 |
|
| 1.02 | 1.57 | 0.37 | 1.38 | |
|
| 1.41 | 1.33 | 1.41 | 1.45 | |
|
| 1.38 | 1.01 | 1.37 | 1.52 | |
|
| 1.73 | 0.32 | 1.61 | 1.78 | |
|
|
| 1.62 | 1.91 | 1.64 | 1.73 |
|
| 0.94 | 1.49 | 1.06 | 1.26 | |
|
| 1.43 | 1.07 | 1.50 | 1.64 | |
|
| 1.30 | 1.84 | 1.31 | 1.39 | |
|
| 0.82 | 1.58 | 1.06 | 1.19 | |
|
|
| 0 | 1.64 | 0.94 | 1.04 |
|
| 1.64 | 0 | 1.62 | 1.81 | |
|
| 0.94 | 1.62 | 0 | 0.68 | |
|
| 1.04 | 1.81 | 0.68 | 0 | |
†: GTP, GDP A59G and Y32C representatives correspond to PDB entries 1qra, 4q21, 1lf0, and 2cl7.
Figure 3Residue-residue plot of correlated motions.
The extent of correlation for all residue pairs (of Cα atomic displacement) during selected portions of the wild-type GTP (upper triangle) and wild-type GDP (lower triangle) Ras aMD simulations. The color scale runs from pink (for values ranging between −1 to −0.75), through white (−0.25 to 0.25) to cyan (0.75 to 1). Negative values are indicative of displacements along opposite directions, namely anticorrelated motions, whereas positive values depict correlated motions occurring along the same direction. Major secondary structure elements are indicated schematically with helices in black and strands in gray.
Figure 4Visualization of dominant motions obtained from (A) PCA of Ras crystal structures, (B) NMA of wild-type GDP Ras, and (C) aMD of wild-type GDP Ras.