DocumentCode :
2089030
Title :
Pressure Induced Conformational Dynamics of HIV-1 Protease: A Molecular Dynamics Simulation Study
Author :
Meher, B.R. ; Kumar, M. V Satish ; Sen, Kausik
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biotechnol., Indian Inst. of Technol., Guwahati, India
fYear :
2008
fDate :
17-20 Dec. 2008
Firstpage :
118
Lastpage :
122
Abstract :
The conformational dynamics of HIV-1 protease (HIV-pr) is known to be essential for ligand binding and determination of cavity size, which changes with several common physiological parameters like temperature, pressure, pH conditions and of course the protein backbone mutations. In this work, the effect of pressure on the conformation and dynamics of HIV-pr was studied in silico at 1 bar (0.987 atm) and 3 Kbar pressure conditions. It can be seen from the literature that protein containing significant number of hydrophobic residues would expose its hydrophobic groups to the solvent exposed area under high pressure conditions, which eventually changes the dynamics and hence conformation of the protein. From our observations, the dynamics studies showed that, although the collective dynamics is restricted under pressure this is not true for some specific residues. From the secondary structure analysis it was observed that turns and bends are favored under high pressure at the expense of ¿-helices and ß-sheets resulting in the reduction of structural variability. Solvent accessible surface (SAS) area of both the low and high pressure simulations showed significant differences. It was also observed that with the elevation in pressure, the hydrophobic effect is decreased. All these conformational changes at high pressure condition may have a special impact on the binding affinity of drugs to the active site region, which may have a direct/indirect effect on the drug resistance behavior of HIV-pr.
Keywords :
drugs; enzymes; hydrophobicity; molecular biophysics; molecular dynamics method; HIV-1 protease; active site region; cavity size determination; drug resistance behavior; hydrophobic residue; ligand binding; molecular dynamics simulation; pH condition; physiological parameter; pressure induced conformational dynamics; protein backbone mutation; secondary structure analysis; solvent accessible surface; ¿-helices; Ã\x9f-sheets; Biochemistry; Biological system modeling; Drugs; Genetic mutations; Information technology; Proteins; Solvents; Spine; Synthetic aperture sonar; Temperature; AMBER force field; High pressure; Solvent accessible surface (SAS); molecular dynamics simulation; protein conformation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Information Technology, 2008. ICIT '08. International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Bhubaneswar
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3745-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICIT.2008.39
Filename :
4731310
Link To Document :
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