Conservation and specialization in PAS domain dynamics

A Pandini, L Bonati*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

34 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The PAS (Per-ARNT-Sim) superfamily is presented as a well-suited study case to demonstrate how comparison of functional motions among distant homologous proteins with conserved fold characteristics may give insight into their functional specialization. Based on the importance of structural flexibility of the receptive structures in anticipating the signal-induced conformational changes of these sensory systems, the dynamics of these structures were analysed. Molecular dynamics was proved to be an effective method to obtain a reliable picture of the dynamics of the crystal structures of HERG, phy3, PYP and FixL, provided that an extensive conformational space sampling is performed. Other reliable sources of dynamic information were the ensembles of NMR structures of hPASK, HIF-2 alpha and PYP. Essential dynamics analysis was successfully employed to extract the relevant information from the sampled conformational spaces. Comparison of motion patterns in the essential subspaces, based on the structural alignment, allowed identification of the specialized region in each domain. This appears to be evolved in the superfamily by following a specific trend, that also suggests the presence of a limited number of general solutions adopted by the PAS domains to sense external signals. These findings may give insight into unknown mechanisms of PAS domains and guide further experimental studies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)127-137
Number of pages11
JournalPROTEIN ENGINEERING DESIGN AND SELECTION
Volume18
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2005

Keywords

  • essential motions
  • molecular dynamics
  • protein structures
  • PHOTOACTIVE YELLOW PROTEIN
  • PLANT PHOTORECEPTOR DOMAIN
  • MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS
  • SIGNAL-TRANSDUCTION
  • BRADYRHIZOBIUM-JAPONICUM
  • CONFORMATIONAL-CHANGES
  • CONCERTED MOTIONS
  • CRYSTAL-STRUCTURE
  • STRUCTURAL BASIS
  • OXYGEN SENSOR

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