Computationally exploring the mechanism of bacteriophage T7 gp4 helicase translocating along ssDNA

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Abstract

Bacteriophage T7 gp4 helicase has served as a model system for understanding mechanisms of hexameric replicative helicase translocation. The mechanistic basis of how nucleoside 50-triphosphate hydrolysis and translocation of gp4 helicase are coupled is not fully resolved. Here, we used a thermodynamically benchmarked coarse-grained protein force field, Associative memory, Water mediated, Structure and Energy Model (AWSEM), with the single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) force field 3SPN.2C to investigate gp4 translocation. We found that the adenosine 50-triphosphate (ATP) at the subunit interface stabilizes the subunit-subunit interaction and inhibits subunit translocation. Hydrolysis of ATP to adenosine 50-diphosphate enables the translocation of one subunit, and new ATP binding at the new subunit interface finalizes the subunit translocation. The LoopD2 and the N-terminal primase domain provide transient protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions that facilitate the large-scale subunit movement. The simulations of gp4 helicase both validate our coarse-grained protein-ssDNA force field and elucidate the molecular basis of replicative helicase translocation.

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Jin, S., Bueno, C., Lu, W., Wang, Q., Chen, M., Chen, X., … Gao, Y. (2022). Computationally exploring the mechanism of bacteriophage T7 gp4 helicase translocating along ssDNA. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(32). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2202239119

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