Electrostatic effects on facilitated dissociation of molecular ligands

ORAL

Abstract

Electrostatic interactions between molecular ligands and their binding sites control many aspects in biomachinery from gene regulation to molecular recognition. In this study, unbinding of multivalent cationic ligands from charged polymeric binding sites is considered. Our molecular dynamics (MD) study is inspried by the good accord between the experiments and MD simulations of single-molecule studies of protein-DNA interactions (Kamar et al, PNAS, 2017). We consider univalent salt concentrations spanning a thousandfold range, together with various concentrations of excess ligands to reveal the ionic effects on spontaneous and facilitated dissociation (FD) unbinding mechanisms. We treat electrostatic interactions both at a Debye-H\”{u}ckel level, as well as by the more precise approach of considering all ionic species explicitly. Both treatments show that salt dependence of FD process becomes weaker with increasing free ligand concentration. Our simulations also predict a variety of FD regimes as a function of free ligand concentration (Erbas et al, arXiv, 2017).

*We acknowledge The Sherman Fairchild Foundation for computational resources. This work was supported by the NSF grants DMR-1611076 and DMR-1206868 and by the NIH grants U54-CA193419, U54-DK107980 and R01-GM105847.

Presenters

  • Aykut Erbas

    • Biomolecular Sci, Northwestern University
    • Material Sci&Eng, Biomolecular Sci.. Phys. Dept., Northwestern University

Authors

  • Aykut Erbas

    • Biomolecular Sci, Northwestern University
    • Material Sci&Eng, Biomolecular Sci.. Phys. Dept., Northwestern University
  • Monica Olvera De La Cruz

    • Northwestern University
    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University
    • Material Sci & Eng., Northwestern Universituy
    • Material Sci. & Eng., Northwestern University
    • Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern Univ
    • Chemistry, Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University
    • Northwestern Univ
    • Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University
  • John Marko

    • Biomolecular Sci, Northwestern University
    • Physics Dept., Biomolecular Sci., Northwestern University
    • Northwestern University