P. A. Kollman died on May 25, 2001.
Computational alanine scanning of the 1:1 human growth hormone–receptor complex
Article first published online: 14 NOV 2001
DOI: 10.1002/jcc.1153
Copyright © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Issue
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Journal of Computational Chemistry
Special Issue: Recent Advances in Computational Biological Chemistry
Volume 23, Issue 1, pages 15–27, 15 January 2002
Additional Information
How to Cite
Huo, S., Massova, I. and Kollman, P. A. (2002), Computational alanine scanning of the 1:1 human growth hormone–receptor complex. Journal of Computational Chemistry, 23: 15–27. doi: 10.1002/jcc.1153
Publication History
- Issue published online: 14 NOV 2001
- Article first published online: 14 NOV 2001
- Manuscript Accepted: 27 JUN 2001
- Manuscript Received: 15 JAN 2001
Funded by
- NIH. Grant Number: GM-29072
- Abstract
- Article
- References
- Cited By
Keywords:
- protein–protein interaction;
- site-directed mutagenesis;
- binding free energy;
- molecular dynamics;
- continuum model
Abstract
The MM-PBSA (Molecular Mechanics–Poisson–Boltzmann surface area) method was applied to the human Growth Hormone (hGH) complexed with its receptor to assess both the validity and the limitations of the computational alanine scanning approach. A 400-ps dynamical trajectory of the fully solvated complex was simulated at 300 K in a 101 Å×81 Å×107 Å water box using periodic boundary conditions. Long-range electrostatic interactions were treated with the particle mesh Ewald (PME) summation method. Equally spaced snapshots along the trajectory were chosen to compute the binding free energy using a continuum solvation model to calculate the electrostatic desolvation free energy and a solvent-accessible surface area approach to treat the nonpolar solvation free energy. Computational alanine scanning was performed on the same set of snapshots by mutating the residues in the structural epitope of the hormone and the receptor to alanine and recomputing the ΔGbinding. To further investigate a particular structure, a 200-ps dynamical trajectory of an R43A hormone–receptor complex was simulated. By postprocessing a single trajectory of the wild-type complex, the average unsigned error of our calculated ΔΔGbinding is ∼1 kcal/mol for the alanine mutations of hydrophobic residues and polar/charged residues without buried salt bridges. When residues involved in buried salt bridges are mutated to alanine, it is demonstrated that a separate trajectory of the alanine mutant complex can lead to reasonable agreement with experimental results. Our approach can be extended to rapid screening of a variety of possible modifications to binding sites. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem 23: 15–27, 2002

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