학술논문

Motor-like Properties of Nonmotor Enzymes
Document Type
article
Source
Biophysical Journal. 114(9)
Subject
Organic Chemistry
Chemical Sciences
HIV/AIDS
Affordable and Clean Energy
Adenosine Kinase
Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases
HIV Protease
Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Movement
Protein Conformation
Thermodynamics
Physical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Biophysics
Biological sciences
Chemical sciences
Physical sciences
Language
Abstract
Molecular motors are thought to generate force and directional motion via nonequilibrium switching between energy surfaces. Because all enzymes can undergo such switching, we hypothesized that the ability to generate rotary motion and torque is not unique to highly adapted biological motor proteins but is instead a common feature of enzymes. We used molecular dynamics simulations to compute energy surfaces for hundreds of torsions in three enzymes-adenosine kinase, protein kinase A, and HIV-1 protease-and used these energy surfaces within a kinetic model that accounts for intersurface switching and intrasurface probability flows. When substrate is out of equilibrium with product, we find computed torsion rotation rates up ∼140 cycles s-1, with stall torques up to ∼2 kcal mol-1 cycle-1, and power outputs up to ∼50 kcal mol-1 s-1. We argue that these enzymes are instances of a general phenomenon of directional probability flows on asymmetric energy surfaces for systems out of equilibrium. Thus, we conjecture that cyclic probability fluxes, corresponding to rotations of torsions and higher-order collective variables, exist in any chiral molecule driven between states in a nonequilibrium manner; we call this the "Asymmetry-Directionality" conjecture. This is expected to apply as well to synthetic chiral molecules switched in a nonequilibrium manner between energy surfaces by light, redox chemistry, or catalysis.