Abstract

Protein structural analysis demonstrates that water molecules are commonly found in the internal cavities of proteins. Analysis of experimental data on the entropies of inorganic crystals suggests that the entropic cost of transferring such a water molecule to a protein cavity will not typically be greater than 7.0 cal/mol/K per water molecule, corresponding to a contribution of approximately +2.0 kcal/mol to the free energy. In this study, we employ the statistical mechanical method of inhomogeneous fluid solvation theory to quantify the enthalpic and entropic contributions of individual water molecules in 19 protein cavities across five different proteins. We utilize information theory to develop a rigorous estimate of the total two-particle entropy, yielding a complete framework to calculate hydration free energies. We show that predictions from inhomogeneous fluid solvation theory are in excellent agreement with predictions from free energy perturbation (FEP) and that these predictions are consistent with experimental estimates. However, the results suggest that water molecules in protein cavities containing charged residues may be subject to entropy changes that contribute more than +2.0 kcal/mol to the free energy. In all cases, these unfavorable entropy changes are predicted to be dominated by highly favorable enthalpy changes. These findings are relevant to the study of bridging water molecules at protein-protein interfaces as well as in complexes with cognate ligands and small-molecule inhibitors.

Highlights

  • Experimental techniques such as x-ray crystallography commonly identify water molecules in the internal cavities of proteins [1,2]

  • We begin by considering the inhomogeneous fluid solvation theory (IFST) estimates of enthalpy, entropy, and free energy contributions of each water molecule to the protein hydration free energy

  • We have predicted the free energy of transferring water molecules from the bulk into a buried protein cavity using the methods of IFST and free energy perturbation (FEP)

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Summary

Introduction

Experimental techniques such as x-ray crystallography commonly identify water molecules in the internal cavities of proteins [1,2]. Analysis from Dunitz calculated the entropy contribution of individual water molecules to the entropy of inorganic crystals [10] This analysis suggests that an entropic cost of transferring an individual water molecule to a protein cavity will not typically be greater than 7.0 cal/mol/K. This corresponds to a contribution of approximately þ2.0 kcal/mol to the free energy. We employ the statistical mechanical method of inhomogeneous fluid solvation theory (IFST) [5,11,12,13,14] to quantify the enthalpic and entropic contributions of individual water molecules in protein cavities. This approach represents the first estimate of this quantity using mutual information and provides a complete framework to calculate two-particle entropies, as envisioned in the original development of IFST [11,12]

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