1jwr Citations

Hydration structure of human lysozyme investigated by molecular dynamics simulation and cryogenic X-ray crystal structure analyses: on the correlation between crystal water sites, solvent density, and solvent dipole.

J Comput Chem 23 1323-36 (2002)
Cited: 40 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 12214315

Abstract

The hydration structure of human lysozyme was studied with cryogenic X-ray diffraction experiment and molecular dynamics simulations. The crystal structure analysis at a resolution of 1.4 A provided 405 crystal water molecules around the enzyme. In the simulations at 300 K, the crystal structure was immersed in explicit water molecules. We examined correlations between crystal water sites and two physical quantities calculated from the 1-ns simulation trajectories: the solvent density reflecting the time-averaged distribution of water molecules, and the solvent dipole measuring the orientational ordering of water molecules around the enzyme. The local high solvent density sites were consistent with the crystal water sites, and better correlation was observed around surface residues with smaller conformational fluctuations during the simulations. Solvent dipoles around those sites exhibited coherent and persistent ordering, indicating that the hydration water molecules at the crystal water sites were highly oriented through the interactions with hydrophilic residues. Those water molecules restrained the orientational motions of adjoining water molecules and induced a solvent dipole field, which was persistent during the simulations around the enzyme. The coherent ordering was particularly prominent in and around the active site cleft of the enzyme. Because the ordering was significant up to the third to fourth solvent layer region from the enzyme surface, the coherently ordered solvent dipoles likely contributed to the molecular recognition of the enzyme in a long-distance range. The present work may provide a new approach combining computational and the experimental studies to understand protein hydration.

Reviews - 1jwr mentioned but not cited (1)

Articles - 1jwr mentioned but not cited (6)

  1. Enhanced antimicrobial activity of engineered human lysozyme. Scanlon TC, Teneback CC, Gill A, Bement JL, Weiner JA, Lamppa JW, Leclair LW, Griswold KE. ACS Chem Biol 5 809-818 (2010)
  2. Bioengineered lysozyme in combination therapies for Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infections. Griswold KE, Bement JL, Teneback CC, Scanlon TC, Wargo MJ, Leclair LW. Bioengineered 5 143-147 (2014)
  3. Crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity. Gill A, Scanlon TC, Osipovitch DC, Madden DR, Griswold KE. PLoS One 6 e16788 (2011)
  4. Genetically enhanced lysozyme evades a pathogen derived inhibitory protein. Dostal SM, Fang Y, Guerrette JC, Scanlon TC, Griswold KE. ACS Chem Biol 10 1110-1117 (2015)
  5. Lysozyme Mutants Accumulate in Cells while Associated at their N-terminal Alpha-domain with the Endoplasmic Reticulum Chaperone GRP78/BiP. Kamada Y, Nawata Y, Sugimoto Y. Int J Biol Sci 12 184-197 (2016)
  6. Efficient Chemical Protein Synthesis using Fmoc-Masked N-Terminal Cysteine in Peptide Thioester Segments. Kar A, Mannuthodikayil J, Singh S, Biswas A, Dubey P, Das A, Mandal K. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 59 14796-14801 (2020)


Articles citing this publication (33)

  1. Water-protein interactions from high-resolution protein crystallography. Nakasako M. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 359 1191-204; discussion 1204-6 (2004)
  2. Statistical and molecular dynamics studies of buried waters in globular proteins. Park S, Saven JG. Proteins 60 450-463 (2005)
  3. Incorporating dipolar solvents with variable density in Poisson-Boltzmann electrostatics. Azuara C, Orland H, Bon M, Koehl P, Delarue M. Biophys J 95 5587-5605 (2008)
  4. Molecular dynamics of a protein surface: ion-residues interactions. Friedman R, Nachliel E, Gutman M. Biophys J 89 768-781 (2005)
  5. Modeling the hydration layer around proteins: HyPred. Virtanen JJ, Makowski L, Sosnick TR, Freed KF. Biophys J 99 1611-1619 (2010)
  6. Hydration water and bulk water in proteins have distinct properties in radial distributions calculated from 105 atomic resolution crystal structures. Chen X, Weber I, Harrison RW. J Phys Chem B 112 12073-12080 (2008)
  7. Changes in Lysozyme Flexibility upon Mutation Are Frequent, Large and Long-Ranged. Verma D, Jacobs DJ, Livesay DR. PLoS Comput Biol 8 e1002409 (2012)
  8. Exploring structurally conserved solvent sites in protein families. Bottoms CA, White TA, Tanner JJ. Proteins 64 404-421 (2006)
  9. Biomolecular Solvation Structure Revealed by Molecular Dynamics Simulations. Wall ME, Calabró G, Bayly CI, Mobley DL, Warren GL. J Am Chem Soc 141 4711-4720 (2019)
  10. Crystal structural analysis of protein-protein interactions drastically destabilized by a single mutation. Urakubo Y, Ikura T, Ito N. Protein Sci 17 1055-1065 (2008)
  11. Enhancing Sampling of Water Rehydration on Ligand Binding: A Comparison of Techniques. Ge Y, Wych DC, Samways ML, Wall ME, Essex JW, Mobley DL. J Chem Theory Comput 18 1359-1381 (2022)
  12. Engineering Escherichia coli for soluble expression and single step purification of active human lysozyme. Lamppa JW, Tanyos SA, Griswold KE. J Biotechnol 164 1-8 (2013)
  13. WATGEN: an algorithm for modeling water networks at protein-protein interfaces. Bui HH, Schiewe AJ, Haworth IS. J Comput Chem 28 2241-2251 (2007)
  14. Structure-based analysis reveals hydration changes induced by arginine hydrochloride. Nakakido M, Tanaka Y, Mitsuhori M, Kudou M, Ejima D, Arakawa T, Tsumoto K. Biophys Chem 137 105-109 (2008)
  15. Changes in hydration structure are necessary for collective motions of a multi-domain protein. Oroguchi T, Nakasako M. Sci Rep 6 26302 (2016)
  16. Evaluation of the influence of the internal aqueous solvent structure on electrostatic interactions at the protein-solvent interface by nonlocal continuum electrostatic approach. Rubinstein A, Sherman S. Biopolymers 87 149-164 (2007)
  17. Water structure in solution and crystal molecular dynamics simulations compared to protein crystal structures. Caldararu O, Misini Ignjatović M, Oksanen E, Ryde U. RSC Adv 10 8435-8443 (2020)
  18. Comprehensive analysis of the Co-structures of dipeptidyl peptidase IV and its inhibitor. Nojima H, Kanou K, Terashi G, Takeda-Shitaka M, Inoue G, Atsuda K, Itoh C, Iguchi C, Matsubara H. BMC Struct Biol 16 11 (2016)
  19. Local order and mobility of water molecules around ambivalent helices. Bhattacharjee N, Biswas P. J Phys Chem B 115 12257-12265 (2011)
  20. Protein surface dynamics: interaction with water and small solutes. Friedman R, Nachliel E, Gutman M. J Biol Phys 31 433-452 (2005)
  21. The role of the confined water in the dynamic crossover of hydrated lysozyme powders. Kurzweil-Segev Y, Greenbaum Gutina A, Popov I, Golodnitsky D, Feldman Y. Phys Chem Chem Phys 18 10992-10999 (2016)
  22. Effect of the ordered interfacial water layer in protein complex formation: A nonlocal electrostatic approach. Rubinstein A, Sabirianov RF, Mei WN, Namavar F, Khoynezhad A. Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys 82 021915 (2010)
  23. LAWS: Local alignment for water sites-Tracking ordered water in simulations. Klyshko E, Kim JS, Rauscher S. Biophys J 122 2871-2883 (2023)
  24. Structural and thermodynamic analysis of factors governing the stability and thermal folding/unfolding of SazCA. Kumar S, Deshpande PA. PLoS One 16 e0249866 (2021)
  25. Collective solvent flows around a protein investigated by molecular dynamics simulation. Umezawa K, Higo J, Shimotakahara S, Shindo H. J Chem Phys 127 045101 (2007)
  26. Hydration and its Hydrogen Bonding State on a Protein Surface in the Crystalline State as Revealed by Molecular Dynamics Simulation. Nakagawa H, Tamada T. Front Chem 9 738077 (2021)
  27. Solvent flow patterns fluctuating largely around a protein and correlation with solvent density fluctuations: A molecular dynamics study. Umezawa K, Morikawa R, Nakamura H, Higo J. J Chem Phys 132 155103 (2010)
  28. Solvent interactions and protein dynamics in spin-labeled T4 lysozyme. Stoica I. J Biomol Struct Dyn 21 745-760 (2004)
  29. Ligand shape emerges in solvent dipole ordering region at ligand binding site of protein. Murata K, Nagata N, Nakanishi I, Kitaura K. J Comput Chem 31 791-796 (2010)
  30. SDOVS: a solvent dipole ordering-based method for virtual screening. Murata K, Nagata N, Nakanishi I, Kitaura K. J Comput Chem 31 2714-2722 (2010)
  31. Water in the hydrated protein powders: Dynamic and structure. Sasaki K, Popov I, Feldman Y. J Chem Phys 150 204504 (2019)
  32. A systematic method for analysing the protein hydration structure of T4 lysozyme. Kysilka J, Vondrášek J. J Mol Recognit 26 479-487 (2013)
  33. Prediction of hydrophilic and hydrophobic hydration structure of protein by neural network optimized using experimental data. Sato K, Oide M, Nakasako M. Sci Rep 13 2183 (2023)