J. Mol. Biol., vol. 367, p. 591-602 (2007)
The two end-state conformations of the
recovery stroke. The converter domain rotates by ~65 degrees to swing the lever arm (in yellow). This rotation is coupled to the closing of the Switch-2 loop over the 40 Angstrom distant ATP. The closing of Switch-2 forms two key H-bonds: 1) Between Gly457 and ATP, and 2) between Phe458 and the Phosphate loop (a.k.a. P-loop), which turn on the ATPase activity of Myosin. |
The coupling
model has two phases. Phase-I: Formation of the H-bond between Gly457 and ATP pulls the relay helix and causes its seesaw pivoting (see arrows). The converter domain attached at the C-terminal-end of the relay helix reacts with a rotation of 25 degrees. Phase-II: The H-bond between Phe458 and the P-loop pulls along the "Wedge-loop" (residues 572-574), which makes tight hydrophobic interactions with Phe458 of the Switch-2 loop. The Wedge loop pushes the SH1-helix, which responds with a piston/seesaw motion. The converter domain, which is attached to the SH1-helix, reacts with a 40 degree rotation. |
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The coupling model is checked by analyzing the motions of the
implicated elements (converter domain, relay and SH1 helices, wedge
loop) during equilibrium molecular
dynamics (MD) of the protein in the two crystallographic
endstates of the recovery stroke.
The principal motions, i.e., the deformations of largest amplitude that
occur during the MD, are identified by Principal
Component Analysis (PCA). The principal motions that contribute
most to the recovery-stroke transition are shown in the following
movies. The color-coding in all the movies is the same as in the
figures shown above. Each movie shows one complete cycle of
oscillatory motion and is best viewed by setting the Movieplayer on "Auto-replay".
Movie 1. Converter
domain rotation:
Principal motion of the converter domain in the MD of the post-recovery
conformation (Principal Component #1, PC1). It consists in a
partial rotation of the converter domain (by ~8 degrees) around an axis
parallel to the SH1 helix. This rotation is accompanied by a
translation of the C-terminus of the relay helix. The amplitude shown
in this movie is the same as the amplitude
observed in the MD at room temperature.
The motions of PC1 correspond to the expected rotation of the converter
domain and swinging of the lever-arm.
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(1Mb)
Movie 2. Seesaw motion of the relay helix:
Principal motion of the relay helix in the MD of the pre-recovery
conformation (PC#2). The atoms at one end of the helix swing in
the direction opposite to the direction of the atoms at the other end,
while the stationary point of the relay helix is located in the middle
of the helix, where Phe652 (in yellow) is the pivoting point of the
seesaw.
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(1Mb)
Movie 3. Correlated wedge/piston motion of
the wedge-loop/SH1-helix:
Principal motion of the SH1 and SH2 helices plus the Wedge-loop in the
MD of the post-recovery conformation (PC#3). The atoms of the
wedge-loop move towards the corner between the
SH1 and SH2 helices, whose atoms move together towards the converter
domain, undergoing a piston-like motion. This is the correlated
motion that is predicted by the
coupling model near the end of the recovery stroke.
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(1Mb)