Molecular Mechanism of Phosphorylation-Mediated Impacts on the Conformation Dynamics of GTP-Bound KRAS Probed by GaMD Trajectory-Based Deep Learning.

Journal: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland)
PMID:

Abstract

The phosphorylation of different sites produces a significant effect on the conformational dynamics of KRAS. Gaussian accelerated molecular dynamics (GaMD) simulations were combined with deep learning (DL) to explore the molecular mechanism of the phosphorylation-mediated effect on conformational dynamics of the GTP-bound KRAS. The DL finds that the switch domains are involved in obvious differences in conformation contacts and suggests that the switch domains play a key role in the function of KRAS. The analyses of free energy landscapes (FELs) reveal that the phosphorylation of pY32, pY64, and pY137 leads to more disordered states of the switch domains than the wild-type (WT) KRAS and induces conformational transformations between the closed and open states. The results from principal component analysis (PCA) indicate that principal motions PC1 and PC2 are responsible for the closed and open states of the phosphorylated KRAS. Interaction networks were analyzed and the results verify that the phosphorylation alters interactions of GTP and magnesium ion Mg with the switch domains. It is concluded that the phosphorylation pY32, pY64, and pY137 tune the activity of KRAS through changing conformational dynamics and interactions of the switch domains. We anticipated that this work could provide theoretical aids for deeply understanding the function of KRAS.

Authors

  • Jianzhong Chen
  • Jian Wang
    Veterinary Diagnostic Center, Shanghai Animal Disease Control Center, Shanghai, China.
  • Wanchun Yang
    School of Science, Shandong Jiaotong University, Jinan 250357, China.
  • Lu Zhao
    Laboratory of Neuro Imaging, USC Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute, Keck School of Medicine of USC, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
  • Juan Zhao
    Hefei University, Hefei, China.
  • Guodong Hu
    Shandong Key Laboratory of Biophysics, Dezhou University, Dezhou 253023, China.