Systematic QM/MM
Study for Predicting 31P NMR Chemical Shifts of Adenosine
Nucleotides in Solution and Stages
of ATP Hydrolysis in a Protein Environment
posted on 2024-03-18, 11:33authored byJudit
Katalin Szántó, Johannes C. B. Dietschreit, Mikhail Shein, Anne K. Schütz, Christian Ochsenfeld
NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) spectroscopy allows
for important
atomistic insights into the structure and dynamics of biological macromolecules;
however, reliable assignments of experimental spectra are often difficult.
Herein, quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations
can provide crucial support. A major problem for the simulations is
that experimental NMR signals are time-averaged over much longer time
scales, and since computed chemical shifts are highly sensitive to
local changes in the electronic and structural environment, sufficiently
large averages over representative structural ensembles are essential.
This entails high computational demands for reliable simulations.
For NMR measurements in biological systems, a nucleus of major interest
is 31P since it is both highly present (e.g., in nucleic
acids) and easily observable. The focus of our present study is to
develop a robust and computationally cost-efficient framework for
simulating 31P NMR chemical shifts of nucleotides. We apply
this scheme to study the different stages of the ATP hydrolysis reaction
catalyzed by p97. Our methodology is based on MM molecular dynamics
(MM-MD) sampling, followed by QM/MM structure optimizations and NMR
calculations. Overall, our study is one of the most comprehensive
QM-based 31P studies in a protein environment and the first
to provide computed NMR chemical shifts for multiple nucleotide states
in a protein environment. This study sheds light on a process that
is challenging to probe experimentally and aims to bridge the gap
between measured and calculated NMR spectroscopic properties.