Article
Building a foundation for structure-based cellulosome design for cellulosic ethanol: Insight into cohesin-dockerin complexation from computer simulation
Article first published online: 16 MAR 2009
DOI: 10.1002/pro.105
Copyright © 2009 The Protein Society
Additional Information
How to Cite
Xu, J., Crowley, M. F. and Smith, J. C. (2009), Building a foundation for structure-based cellulosome design for cellulosic ethanol: Insight into cohesin-dockerin complexation from computer simulation. Protein Science, 18: 949–959. doi: 10.1002/pro.105
Publication History
- Issue published online: 21 APR 2009
- Article first published online: 16 MAR 2009
- Accepted manuscript online: 16 MAR 2009 12:00AM EST
- Manuscript Accepted: 16 FEB 2009
- Manuscript Revised: 22 JAN 2009
- Manuscript Received: 3 NOV 2008
Funded by
- BioEnergy Science Center
Keywords:
- cellulosic ethanol;
- cellulosome;
- cohesin-dockerin;
- principal component analysis;
- free energy perturbation;
- adaptive biasing force;
- potential of mean force
Abstract
The organization and assembly of the cellulosome, an extracellular multienzyme complex produced by anaerobic bacteria, is mediated by the high-affinity interaction of cohesin domains from scaffolding proteins with dockerins of cellulosomal enzymes. We have performed molecular dynamics simulations and free energy calculations on both the wild type (WT) and D39N mutant of the C. thermocellum Type I cohesin-dockerin complex in aqueous solution. The D39N mutation has been experimentally demonstrated to disrupt cohesin-dockerin binding. The present MD simulations indicate that the substitution triggers significant protein flexibility and causes a major change of the hydrogen-bonding network in the recognition strips—the conserved loop regions previously proposed to be involved in binding—through electrostatic and salt-bridge interactions between β-strands 3 and 5 of the cohesin and α-helix 3 of the dockerin. The mutation-induced subtle disturbance in the local hydrogen-bond network is accompanied by conformational rearrangements of the protein side chains and bound water molecules. Additional free energy perturbation calculations of the D39N mutation provide differences in the cohesin-dockerin binding energy, thus offering a direct, quantitative comparison with experiments. The underlying molecular mechanism of cohesin-dockerin complexation is further investigated through the free energy profile, that is, potential of mean force (PMF) calculations of WT cohesin-dockerin complex. The PMF shows a high-free energy barrier against the dissociation and reveals a stepwise pattern involving both the central β-sheet interface and its adjacent solvent-exposed loop/turn regions clustered at both ends of the β-barrel structure.

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