Issue 36, 2011

Crucial importance of the water-entropy effect in predicting hot spots in protein–protein complexes

Abstract

“Hot spots” are residues accounting for the majority of the proteinprotein binding free energy (BFE) despite that they comprise only a small fraction of the proteinprotein interface. A hot spot can be found experimentally by measuring the BFE change upon mutating it to alanine: the mutation gives rise to a significantly large increase in the BFE. Theoretical prediction of hot spots is an enthusiastic subject in biophysics, biochemistry, and bioinformatics. For the development of a reliable prediction method, it is essential to understand the physical origin of hot spots. To this end, we calculate the water-entropy gains upon binding both for a wild-type complex and for its mutant complex using a hybrid method of the angle-dependent integral equation theory applied to a molecular model for water and the morphometric approach. We note that this type of calculation has never been employed in the previously reported methods. The BFE change due to alanine mutation is evaluated only from the change in the water-entropy gain with no parameters fitted to the experimental data. It is shown that the overall performance of predicting hot spots in our method is higher than that in Robetta, a standard free-energy-based method using fitting parameters, when the most widely used criterion for defining an actual hot spot is adopted. This result strongly suggests that the water-entropy effect we calculate is the key factor governing basic physics of hot spots.

Graphical abstract: Crucial importance of the water-entropy effect in predicting hot spots in protein–protein complexes

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 May 2011
Accepted
19 Jul 2011
First published
15 Aug 2011

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011,13, 16236-16246

Crucial importance of the water-entropy effect in predicting hot spots in proteinprotein complexes

H. Oshima, S. Yasuda, T. Yoshidome, M. Ikeguchi and M. Kinoshita, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, 13, 16236 DOI: 10.1039/C1CP21597C

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