scholarly journals Aquaglyceroporin AQP7's affinity for its substrate glycerol

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Falato ◽  
Ruth Chen ◽  
Liao Y Chen

AQP7 is one of the four human aquaglyceroporins that facilitate glycerol transport across the cell membrane, a biophysical process that is essential in human physiology. Therefore, it is interesting to compute AQP7s affinity for its substrate (glycerol) with reasonable certainty to compare with the experimental data suggesting high affinity in contrast with most computational studies predicting low affinity. In this study aimed at computing the AQP7-glycerol affinity with high confidence, we implemented a direct computation of the affinity from unbiased equilibrium molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of three all-atom systems constituted with 0.16M, 4.32M, and 10.23M atoms, respectively. These three sets of simulations manifested a fundamental physics law that the intrinsic fluctuations of pressure in a system are inversely proportional to the system size (the number of atoms in it). These simulations showed that the computed values of glycerol-AQP7 affinity are dependent upon the system size (the inverse affinity estimations were, respectively, 47.3 mM, 1.6 mM, and 0.92 mM for the three model systems). In this, we obtained a lower bound for the AQP7-glycerol affinity (an upper bound for the dissociation constant). Namely, the AQP7-glycerol affinity is stronger than 1087/M (the dissociation constant is less than 0.92 mM). Additionally, we conducted hyper steered MD (hSMD) simulations to map out the Gibbs free-energy profile. From the free-energy profile, we produced an independent computation of the AQP7-glycerol dissociation constant being approximately 0.18 mM.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto A. Rodriguez ◽  
Ruth Chan ◽  
Huiyun Liang ◽  
Liao Y. Chen

Graphical AbstractABSTRACTThe structures of several aquaglyceroporins have been resolved to atomic resolution showing two or more glycerols bound inside a channel and confirming a glycerol-facilitator’s affinity for its substrate glycerol. However, the kinetics data of glycerol transport experiments all point to unsaturated transport that is characteristic of low substrate affinity in terms of the Michaelis-Menten kinetics. In this article, we present an in silico-in vitro research focused on AQP3, one of the human aquaglyceroporins that is natively expressed in the abundantly available erythrocytes. We conducted 2.1 μs in silico simulations of AQP3 embedded in a model erythrocyte membrane with intracellular-extracellular asymmetries in leaflet lipid compositions and compartment salt ions. From the equilibrium molecular dynamics (MD), we elucidated the mechanism of glycerol transport at high substrate concentrations. From the steered MD simulations, we computed the Gibbs free-energy profile throughout the AQP3 channel. From the free-energy profile, we quantified the kinetics of glycerol transport that is unsaturated due to glycerol-glycerol interaction mediated by AQP3 resulting in the concerted movement of two glycerol molecules for the transport of one glycerol molecule across the cell membrane. We conducted in vitro experiments on glycerol uptake into human erythrocytes for a wide range of substrate concentrations and various temperatures. The experimental data quantitatively validated our theoretical-computational conclusions on the unsaturated glycerol transport through AQP3 that has high affinity for glycerol.


Author(s):  
Norifumi Yamamoto

The contributing factors that cause the aggregation-induced emission (AIE) are determined by identifying characteristic differences in the free energy profiles of the AIE processes of the AIE-active E-form of CN-MBE and the inactive Z-form.


2016 ◽  
Vol 144 (4) ◽  
pp. 044703 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos Braga ◽  
Jordan Muscatello ◽  
Gabriel Lau ◽  
Erich A. Müller ◽  
George Jackson

Biology ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-259
Author(s):  
Yoshifumi Fukunishi ◽  
Saki Hongo ◽  
Masami Lintuluoto ◽  
Hiroshi Matsuo

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