Learning about Biomolecular Solvation from Water in Protein Crystals.
Abstract
Water occupies typically 50% of a protein crystal and thus significantly contributes
to the diffraction signal in crystallography experiments. Separating its contribution
from that of the protein is, however, challenging because most water molecules are
not localized and are thus difficult to assign to specific density peaks. The intricateness
of the protein-water interface compounds this difficulty. This information has, therefore,
not often been used to study biomolecular solvation. Here, we develop a methodology
to surmount in part this difficulty. More specifically, we compare the solvent structure
obtained from diffraction data for which experimental phasing is available to that
obtained from constrained molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The resulting spatial
density maps show that commonly used MD water models are only partially successful
at reproducing the structural features of biomolecular solvation. The radial distribution
of water is captured with only slightly higher accuracy than its angular distribution,
and only a fraction of the water molecules assigned with high reliability to the crystal
structure is recovered. These differences are likely due to shortcomings of both the
water models and the protein force fields. Despite these limitations, we manage to
infer protonation states of some of the side chains utilizing MD-derived densities.
Type
Journal articleSubject
WaterMannose-Binding Lectin
Crystallization
Solubility
Thermodynamics
Molecular Dynamics Simulation
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24993Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b09898Publication Info
Altan, Irem; Fusco, Diana; Afonine, Pavel V; & Charbonneau, Patrick (2018). Learning about Biomolecular Solvation from Water in Protein Crystals. The journal of physical chemistry. B, 122(9). pp. 2475-2486. 10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b09898. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24993.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Patrick Charbonneau
Professor of Chemistry
Professor Charbonneau studies soft matter. His work combines theory and simulation
to understand the glass problem, protein crystallization, microphase formation, and colloidal
assembly in external fields.

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