Computational studies of protein pK(a)s and metalloprotein reduction potentials
Abstract (Summary)
Protein pKas and metalloprotein reduction potentials are studied with computational
methodologies based on an ab initio quantum mechanics (QM) description of the protein
and a linearized Poisson-Boltzmann Equation (LPBE) description of the solvent.
The practical applicability of the QM/LPBE method is extended to proteins by using
a QM description of the ionizable residue and a molecular mechanics (MM) description
of the rest of the protein. This QM/MM/LPBE method is used to predict the pKa of Lys55
in the serine protease inhibitor turkey ovomucoid third domain (OMTKY3) and the
prediction of 11.0 is in good agreement with the experimental value of 11.1. This is the
first time a protein pKa value has been predicted with QM/MM methods.
The QM/LPBE method is used to predict and interpret the pKa’s of the five carboxyl
residues (Asp7, Glu10, Glu19, Asp27, and Glu43) in OMTKY3. All the predicted pKa
values are within 0.5 pH units of experiment, with a root mean square deviation of 0.31
pH units. We find that the decreased pKa’s observed for some of the residues are
primarily due to hydrogen bonds to the carboxyl oxygens. Hydrophobic effects are also
shown to be important in raising the pKa. Interactions with charged residues are shown
to have relatively little effect on the carboxyl pKa’s in this protein, in general agreement
with experiment.
The relative Cu2+/Cu+ reduction potentials of six type-1 copper sites (cucumber
stellacyanin, P. aeruginosa azurin, poplar plastocyanin, C. cinereus laccase, T.
ferrooxidans rusticyanin and human ceruloplasmin), which lie in a reduction potential
range from 260 mV to over 1000 mV, have been studied with the QM/LPBE method. For
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the first time, the range and relative orderings of the reduction potentials are reproduced
well compared to experimental values. The study suggests that the key interactions tuning
the reduction potentials of blue copper sites are located within 6 Å of the Cu atoms.
Further analysis suggests that the reduction potential differences of type-1 copper sites
are caused by axial ligand interactions, hydrogen bonding to the SCys, and protein
constraints on the inner sphere ligand orientations.
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School:University of Iowa
School Location:USA - Iowa
Source Type:Master's Thesis
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