Adenosine Triphosphate Hydrolysis Mechanism in Kinesin
Studied by Combined Quantum-Mechanical/Molecular-Mechanical Metadynamics
Simulations
Posted on 2013-06-19 - 00:00
Kinesin
is a molecular motor that hydrolyzes adenosine triphosphate
(ATP) and moves along microtubules against load. While motility and
atomic structures have been well-characterized for various members
of the kinesin family, not much is known about ATP hydrolysis inside
the active site. Here, we study ATP hydrolysis mechanisms in the kinesin-5
protein Eg5 by using combined quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics
metadynamics simulations. Approximately 200 atoms at the catalytic
site are treated by a dispersion-corrected density functional and,
in total, 13 metadynamics simulations are performed with their cumulative
time reaching ∼0.7 ns. Using the converged runs, we compute
free energy surfaces and obtain a few hydrolysis pathways. The pathway
with the lowest free energy barrier involves a two-water chain and
is initiated by the Pγ–Oβ dissociation concerted with approach of the lytic water to PγO3–. This immediately induces a proton transfer from the
lytic water to another water, which then gives a proton to the conserved
Glu270. Later, the proton is transferred back from Glu270 to HPO42– via
another hydrogen-bonded chain. We find that the reaction is favorable
when the salt bridge between Glu270 in switch II and Arg234 in switch
I is transiently broken, which facilitates the ability of Glu270 to
accept a proton. When ATP is placed in the ADP-bound conformation
of Eg5, the ATP-Mg moiety is surrounded by many water molecules and
Thr107 blocks the water chain, which together make the hydrolysis
reaction less favorable. The observed two-water chain mechanisms are
rather similar to those suggested in two other motors, myosin and
F1-ATPase, raising the possibility of a common mechanism.
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McGrath, Matthew J.; Kuo, I.-F. Will; Hayashi, Shigehiko; Takada, Shoji (2016). Adenosine Triphosphate Hydrolysis Mechanism in Kinesin
Studied by Combined Quantum-Mechanical/Molecular-Mechanical Metadynamics
Simulations. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja401540g