Jen Hsin, James Gumbart, Leonardo G. Trabuco, Elizabeth Villa, Pu Qian, C. Neil
Hunter, and Klaus Schulten.
Protein-induced membrane curvature investigated through molecular
dynamics flexible fitting.
Biophysical Journal, 97:321-329, 2009.
(PMC: 2711417)
HSIN2009
In the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodobacter () sphaeroides, light is absorbed by membrane-bound light-harvesting (LH) proteins LH1 and LH2. LH1 directly surrounds the reaction center (RC) and, together with PufX, forms a dimeric (RC-LH1-PufX) protein complex. In LH2-deficient Rba. sphaeroides mutants, RC-LH1-PufX dimers aggregate into tubular vesicles with a radius of 250-550 Å, making RC-LH1-PufX one of the few integral membrane proteins known to actively induce membrane curvature. Recently, a three-dimensional electron microscopy density map showed that the Rba. sphaeroides RC-LH1-PufX dimer exhibits a prominent bend at its dimerizing interface. To investigate the curvature properties of this highly bent protein, we employed molecular dynamics simulations to fit an all-atom structural model of the RC-LH1-PufX dimer within the electron microscopy density map. The simulations reveal how the dimer produces a membrane with high local curvature, even though the location of PufX cannot yet be determined uniquely. The resulting membrane curvature agrees well with the size of RC-LH1-PufX tubular vesicles, and demonstrates how the local curvature properties of the RC-LH1-PufX dimer propagate to form the observed long-range organization of the Rba. sphaeroides tubular vesicles.
Download Full Text
The manuscripts available on our site are provided for your personal
use only and may not be retransmitted or redistributed without written
permissions from the paper's publisher and author. You may not upload any
of this site's material to any public server, on-line service, network, or
bulletin board without prior written permission from the publisher and
author. You may not make copies for any commercial purpose. Reproduction
or storage of materials retrieved from this web site is subject to the
U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, Title 17 U.S.C.