Abstract

Copper chaperones deliver reduced copper (i.e., Cu(I)) to metal-binding domains of P-type ATPases in the cytoplasm of a range of organisms. Both chaperones and target domains have a ferredoxin-like fold and metal-binding motifs involving two Cys residues. Here, we investigated the Cu-binding geometry and structural dynamics of two homologous Cu(I) chaperones, Homo sapiens Atox1 and Bacillus subtilis CopZ, using a combination of quantum mechanical-molecular mechanics (QM-MM) and classical molecular dynamics (MD) methods. Our QM-MM optimized geometries for the holo- proteins suggested that Cu(I) in Atox1 favors a linear Cys(S)-Cu-Cys(S) arrangement but that this angle is close to 150 degrees in CopZ. Classical MD simulations suggest that both Atox1 and CopZ apo- forms have an increased conformational flexibility as compared to the respective holo- forms. This difference is most pronounced in CopZ and correlates with a lower in vitro thermal stability. Both average fluctuation (i.e., rmsd) and radius of gyration data demonstrate that the effects of Cu(I) coordination extend throughout the proteins. Distinct deviations between the two homologues were found in protein-solvent interactions, entropy of Cu(I) binding, and apo-protein Cys-Cys distance distributions. Our in silico results provide new insights into copper chaperone behavior with direct implications for copper transport mechanisms in vivo.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call