Understanding Allosteric Communication in Biological Systems using Molecular Dynamics Simulations

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2024

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Abstract

Allostery is critical to survival in living organisms due to its biological relevance in signal transduction, metabolism, and drug discovery. However, the molecular details of this phenomenon remain unclear.

In this thesis, I present my work on two allosteric protein systems, each representative of structure-based (E. coli Biotin Protein Ligase) and dynamics-based (B. taurus S100B) allostery. I examined the structural and dynamic features of the proteins and associated variants subjected to various allosteric triggers (ligand/salt/mutations) to study how external/internal perturbations transmit across large distances using Molecular Dyanmic simulations in conjunction with the experiments carried out by our collaborators. Additionally, I carried out Network analyses on the two systems to characterize communication pathways on the protein/ protein family levels. Together, the structural and dynamic features would help us elucidate the underlying mechanism of allostery.

The first chapter introduces the two systems with a brief dive into the history of allostery. In the second chapter, my work on E. coli Biotin Protein Ligase and its variants reveal one possible mechanism by which disorder-to-order transitions at the functional surfaces transmit via local changes around the critical residues in the allosteric network. The third chapter explores how the protein network reconfigures to adopt a new allosteric function by studying the allosteric and non-allosteric Biotin Protein Ligases. The fourth chapter elucidates the structural and dynamical markers in bovine S100B, which help to relay information about an allosteric signal by varying two allosteric triggers - ionic strength and target peptide. The final chapter sums up my conclusions, where I propose additional experiments and computational analyses that could be carried out to further our understanding of allostery.

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