Budday D, Leyendecker S, van den Bedem H (2018)
Publication Language: English
Publication Type: Journal article, Original article
Publication year: 2018
Book Volume: 58
Pages Range: 2108-2122
Journal Issue: 10
URI: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.jcim.8b00267?journalCode=jcisd8
Elastic network models (ENMs) and constraint-based, topological rigidity
 analysis are two distinct, coarse-grained approaches to study 
conformational flexibility of macromolecules. In the two decades since 
their introduction, both have contributed significantly to insights into
 protein molecular mechanisms and function. However, despite a shared 
purpose of these approaches, the topological nature of rigidity 
analysis, and thereby the absence of motion modes, has impeded a direct 
comparison. Here, we present an alternative, kinematic approach to 
rigidity analysis, which circumvents these drawbacks. We introduce a 
novel protein hydrogen bond network spectral decomposition, which 
provides an orthonormal basis for collective motions modulated by 
noncovalent interactions, analogous to the eigenspectrum of normal 
modes. The zero modes decompose proteins into rigid clusters identical 
to those from topological rigidity, while nonzero modes rank protein 
motions by their hydrogen bond collective energy penalty. Our kinematic 
flexibility analysis bridges topological rigidity theory and ENM, 
enabling a detailed analysis of motion modes obtained from both 
approaches. Analysis of a large, structurally diverse data set revealed 
that collectivity of protein motions, reported by the Shannon entropy, 
is significantly reduced for rigidity theory compared to normal mode 
approaches. Strikingly, kinematic flexibility analysis suggests that the
 hydrogen bonding network encodes a protein-fold specific, spatial 
hierarchy of motions, which goes nearly undetected in ENM. This 
hierarchy reveals distinct motion regimes that rationalize experimental 
and simulated protein stiffness variations. Kinematic motion modes 
highly correlate with reported crystallographic B factors and molecular 
dynamics simulations of adenylate kinase. A formal expression for 
changes in free energy derived from the spectral decomposition indicates
 that motions across nearly 40% of modes obey enthalpy–entropy 
compensation. Taken together, our results suggest that hydrogen bond 
networks have evolved to modulate protein structure and dynamics, which can be efficiently probed by kinematic flexibility analysis.
APA:
Budday, D., Leyendecker, S., & van den Bedem, H. (2018). Kinematic Flexibility Analysis: Hydrogen Bonding Patterns Impart a Spatial Hierarchy of Protein Motion. Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, 58(10), 2108-2122. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jcim.8b00267
MLA:
Budday, Dominik, Sigrid Leyendecker, and Henry van den Bedem. "Kinematic Flexibility Analysis: Hydrogen Bonding Patterns Impart a Spatial Hierarchy of Protein Motion." Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling 58.10 (2018): 2108-2122.
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