Coarse-Grained Models for Vault Normal Model Analysis

Methods Mol Biol. 2023:2671:307-318. doi: 10.1007/978-1-0716-3222-2_17.

Abstract

Recent experiments have shown that the molecular complex of vault has large conformational changes at its shoulder and cap regions in solution. From the comparison of two configuration structures, it has been found that the shoulder region can twist and move outward, while the cap region will rotate and push upward correspondingly. To further understand these experimental results, in this paper, we study the vault dynamics for the first time. Since vault has an extremely large-sized structure with around 63,336 Cα atoms, traditional normal mode method with the Cα coarse-grained representation will fall short. We employ a newly invented multiscale virtual particle-based anisotropic network model (MVP-ANM). To reduce the complexity, the 39-folder vault structure is coarse-grained to about 6000 virtual particles, which significantly reduces the computational cost while still maintaining the basic structure information. Among the 14 low frequency eigenmodes from Mode 7 to Mode 20, two eigenmodes, i.e., Mode 9 and Mode 20, are found to be directly associated with the experimental observations. In Mode 9, shoulder region undergoes a significant expansion while the cap part is lifted upward. In Mode 20, a clear rotation of both shoulder and cap regions is well observed. Our results are consistent with the experimental observations. More importantly, these low frequency eigenmodes indicate that the vault waist, shoulder and lower cap regions are the most likely regions for the opening of the vault particle. And the opening mechanism is highly likely to be rotation and expansion at these regions. As far as we know, this is the first work to provide the normal mode analysis for the vault complex.

Keywords: Anisotropic network model; Conformation; Eigenmodes; Normal mode; Vault.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Anisotropy*
  • Rotation