• Title of article

    Intermolecular interaction studies of winter flounder antifreeze protein reveal the existence of thermally accessible binding state

  • Author/Authors

    Nguyen، Dat H. نويسنده , , Colvin، Michael E. نويسنده , , Yeh، Yin نويسنده , , Feeney، Robert E. نويسنده , , Fink، William H. نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
  • Pages
    -108
  • From page
    109
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    The physical nature underlying intermolecular interactions between two rod-like winter flounder antifreeze protein (AFP) molecules and their implication for the mechanism of antifreeze function are examined in this work using molecular dynamics simulations, augmented with free energy calculations employing a continuum solvation model. The energetics for different modes of interactions of two AFP molecules is examined in both vacuum and aqueous phases along with the water distribution in the region encapsulated by two antiparallel AFP backbones. The results show that in a vacuum two AFP molecules intrinsically attract each other in the antiparallel fashion, where their complementary charge side chains face each other directly. In the aqueous environment, this attraction is counteracted by both screening and entropic effects. Therefore, two nearly energetically degenerate states, an aggregated state and a dissociated state, result as a new aspect of intermolecular interaction in the paradigm for the mechanism of action of AFP. The relevance of these findings to the mechanism of function of freezing inhibition in the context of our work on Antarctic cod antifreeze glycoprotein (Nguyen et al., Biophysical Journal, 2002, Vol. 82, pp. 2892-2905) is discussed.
  • Keywords
    protein dimer , winter flounder , molecular dynamics (MD) , protein-protein interactions , biological antifreeze
  • Journal title
    BIOPOLYMERS (ORIGINAL RESEARCH ON BIOMOLECULES)
  • Serial Year
    2004
  • Journal title
    BIOPOLYMERS (ORIGINAL RESEARCH ON BIOMOLECULES)
  • Record number

    120749