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On Computing Equilibrium Binding Constants for Protein-Protein Association in Membranes.

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Protein association in lipid membranes is fundamental to membrane protein function and of great biomedical relevance. All-atom and coarse-grained models have been extensively used to understand the protein-protein interactions in… Click to show full abstract

Protein association in lipid membranes is fundamental to membrane protein function and of great biomedical relevance. All-atom and coarse-grained models have been extensively used to understand the protein-protein interactions in the membrane and to compute equilibrium association constants. However, slow translational and rotational diffusion of protein in membrane presents challenges to the effective sampling of conformations defining the ensembles of free and bound states contributing to the association equilibrium and the free energy of dimerization. We revisit the homodimerization equilibrium of the TM region of glycophorin A. Conformational sampling is performed using umbrella sampling along previously proposed one-dimensional collective variables and compared with sampling over a two-dimensional collective variable space using the MARTINI v2.2 force field. We demonstrate that the one-dimensional collective variables suffer from restricted sampling of the native homodimer conformations leading to a biased free energy landscape. Conversely, simulations along the two-dimensional collective variable effectively characterize the thermodynamically relevant native and non-native interactions contributing to the association equilibrium. These results demonstrate the challenges associated with accurately characterizing binding equilibria when multiple poses contribute to the bound state ensemble.

Keywords: protein protein; equilibrium; protein association; dimensional collective; association

Journal Title: Journal of chemical theory and computation
Year Published: 2022

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