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Biophys. J. BioFAST: First Published January 28, 2005. doi:10.1529/biophysj.104.056101
© 2005 by the Biophysical Society.


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BIOPHYSICAL THEORY AND MODELING

Fluctuations and Correlations in Crystalline Protein Dynamics: A Simulation Analysis of Staphylococcal Nuclease

Lars MEINHOLD 1* and Jeremy C. Smith 2

1 University of Heidelberg
2 Universitaet Heidelberg

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: lars{at}meinhold.de.

Submitted on November 10, 2004
Revised on January 6, 2005
Accepted on 25 January 2005


   Abstract
Understanding collective motions in protein crystals is likely to furnish insight into functional protein dynamics and will improve models for refinement against diffraction data. Here, four 10 ns molecular dynamics simulations of crystalline Staphylococcal Nuclease are reported and analysed in terms of fluctuations and correlations in atomic motion. The simulation-derived fluctuations strongly correlate with, but are slightly higher than, the values derived from the experimental B-factors. About 70% of the atomic fluctuations are due to internal protein motion. For 65% of the protein atoms the internal fluctuations converge on the nanosecond timescale. Convergence is much slower for the elements of the interatomic displacement correlation matrix - of these more than 80% converge within 1 ns for interatomic distances ≤6Å, but only 10% for separations {approx}12Å. Those collective motions converged on the nanosecond timescale involve mostly correlations within the {beta}-barrel or between {alpha}-helices of the protein. The R-factor with the experimental X-ray diffuse scattering for the crystal, which is determined by the displacement variance-covariance matrix, decreases to 8% after 10 ns simulation. Both the number of converged correlation matrix elements and the R-factor depend logarithmically on time, consistent with a model in which the number of energy minima sampled depends exponentially on the maximum energy barrier crossed. The logarithmic dependence is also extrapolated to predict a convergence time for the whole variance-covariance matrix of {approx}1 µs.

Key Words: B-factors, X-ray diffuse scattering, convergence, correlated displacements, molecular dynamics, variance-covariance matrix




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Copyright © 2005 by the Biophysical Society.