Abstract

Antiapoptotic Bcl-xL plays central roles in regulating programed cell death. Partial unfolding of Bcl-xL has been observed at the interface upon specific binding to the pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein PUMA, which in turn disrupts the interaction of Bcl-xL with tumor suppressor p53 and promotes apoptosis. Previous analysis of existing Bcl-xL structures and atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have suggested that substantial intrinsic structure heterogeneity exists at the BH3-only protein binding interface of Bcl-xL to facilitate its conformational transitions upon binding. In this study, enhanced sampling is applied to further characterize the interfacial conformations of unbound Bcl-xL in explicit solvent. Extensive replica exchange with solute tempering (REST) simulations, with a total accumulated time of 16 μs, were able to cover much wider conformational spaces for the interfacial region of Bcl-xL. The resulting structural ensembles are much better converged, with local and long-range structural features that are highly consistent with existing NMR data. These simulations further demonstrate that the BH3-only protein binding interface of Bcl-xL is intrinsically disordered and samples many rapidly interconverting conformations. Intriguingly, all previously observed conformers are well represented in the unbound structure ensemble. Such intrinsic structural heterogeneity and flexibility may be critical for Bcl-xL to undergo partial unfolding induced by PUMA binding, and likely provide a robust basis that allows Bcl-xL to respond sensitively to binding of various ligands in cellular signaling and regulation.

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