Exploring the Structures and Binding Sites of Electroneutral Cation/Proton Antiporter Proteins with Computational Methods
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Description
Secondary active transporters play significant roles in maintaining living cells' homeostasis by utilizing the electrochemical gradient in driving ions or protons as the source of free energy to transport substrate through biological membranes.A broadly recognized molecular framework, the alternating access model, describes the transport mechanism as the transporter undergoes conformational changes between different conformations and alternatingly exposes its binding site to intracellular and extracellular sides and, thus, exchanges ion and substrate in a cyclical manner.
Recent progress in structural biology brought the first-ever structural insights into the mammalian Cation-Proton Antiporters (CPA) family of proteins.
However, the dynamic atomic-level information about the interactions between the newly discovered structures and the bound ion or the corresponding substrate remains unknown.
With Molecular Dynamics (MD), multiple spontaneous ion binding events were observed in the equilibrium simulations, revealing the binding site topology of Horse Sodium-Proton Exchanger 9 (NHE9) and Bison Sodium-Proton Antiporter 2 (NHA2) in their preferred protonation state.
Further investigation into more CPA homologs compared various aspects, including sequence identity, binding site topology, and energetic properties, and obtained general insights into the similarities shared by the binding process of CPA members.
The putative binding site and other conserved residues in their actively ion-bound poses were identified for each model, and their similarities were compared.
The energetic properties accessed by the three-dimensional free energy profile, initially found to be binding unfavorable for the experimental structures, were recalculated based on the simulation data. The updated results show consistency with the correct binding affinity as indicated by the experimental methods.
This work provided a general picture of the structures and the ion-protein interaction of CPA proteins and serves as comprehensive guidance for any related future structural and computational work.