Analyzing Machupo virus-receptor binding by molecular dynamics simulations
Austin G. Meyer, Sara L. Sawyer, Andrew D. Ellington, Claus O. Wilke

TL;DR
This study uses steered molecular dynamics to analyze how mutations affect the binding affinity between Machupo virus GP1 and human transferrin receptor, providing insights into viral binding mechanisms and mutation effects.
Contribution
It applies steered molecular dynamics in a novel way to predict mutational effects on protein-protein affinity, especially for complex mutations and flexible regions.
Findings
Differentiates wild type and mutant complexes without prior knowledge.
Correlates well with free energy perturbation results.
Identifies non-essential hydrogen bonds and potential evolutionary suppressor sites.
Abstract
In many biological applications, we would like to be able to computationally predict mutational effects on affinity in protein-protein interactions. However, many commonly used methods to predict these effects perform poorly in important test cases. In particular, the effects of multiple mutations, non-alanine substitutions, and flexible loops are difficult to predict with available tools and protocols. We present here an existing method applied in a novel way to a new test case; we interrogate affinity differences resulting from mutations in a host-virus protein-protein interface. We use steered molecular dynamics (SMD) to computationally pull the machupo virus (MACV) spike glycoprotein (GP1) away from the human transferrin receptor (hTfR1). We then approximate affinity using the maximum applied force of separation and the area under the force-versus-distance curve. We find, even…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBacteriophages and microbial interactions · Protein Structure and Dynamics · Plant Virus Research Studies
