posted on 2013-06-12, 00:00authored byFilip Persson, Bertil Halle
Many
proteins rely on rare structural fluctuations for their function,
whereby solvent and other small molecules gain transient access to
internal cavities. In magnetic relaxation dispersion (MRD) experiments,
water molecules buried in such cavities are used as intrinsic probes
of the intermittent protein motions that govern their exchange with
external solvent. While this has allowed a detailed characterization
of exchange kinetics for several proteins, little is known about the
exchange mechanism. Here, we use a millisecond all-atom MD trajectory
produced by Shaw et al. (Science2010, 330, 341) to characterize water exchange from
the four internal hydration sites in the protein bovine pancreatic
trypsin inhibitor. Using a recently developed stochastic point process
approach, we compute the survival correlation function probed by MRD
experiments as well as other quantities designed to validate the exchange-mediated
orientational randomization (EMOR) model used to interpret the MRD
data. The EMOR model is found to be quantitatively accurate, and the
simulation reproduces the experimental mean survival times for all
four sites with activation energy discrepancies in the range 0–3 kBT. On the other hand, the
simulated hydration sites are somewhat too flexible, and the water
flip barrier is underestimated by up to 6 kBT. The simulation reveals that water molecules gain
access to the internal sites by a transient aqueduct mechanism, migrating
as single-file water chains through transient (<5 ns) tunnels or
pores. The present study illustrates the power of state-of-the-art
molecular dynamics simulations in validating and extending experimental
results.