Abstract
The human StAR-related lipid transfer domain protein 2 (STARD2), also known as phosphatidylcholine (PC) transfer protein, is a single-domain lipid transfer protein thought to transfer PC lipids between intracellular membranes. We performed extensive μs-long molecular dynamics simulations of STARD2 of its apo and holo forms in the presence or absence of complex lipid bilayers. The simulations in water reveal ligand-dependent conformational changes. In the 2 μs-long simulations of apo STARD2 in the presence of a lipid bilayer, we observed spontaneous reproducible PC lipid uptake into the protein hydrophobic cavity. We propose that the lipid extraction mechanism involves one to two metastable states stabilized by choline-tyrosine or choline-tryptophane cation-π interactions. Using free energy perturbation, we evaluate that each PC-tyrosine cation-π interactions contribute 1.8 kcal/mol and 2.5 kcal/mol to the affinity of a PC-STARD2 metastable state, thus potentially providing a significant decrease of the energy barrier required for lipid desorption.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information for "Model mechanism for lipid uptake by the human STARD2/PC-TP phosphatidylcholine transfer protein"
Description
TalandashtiR_SI.pdf contains the details of the computational methods and protocols, a list of simulated systems and their composition including the lipid composition of the membrane models, snapshots and analysis of trajectories from simulations of apo and holo forms of STARD2 in water, minimum protein-bilayer distances along simulation time and the depth of insertion for each amino acid, analyses and snapshots of STARD2-bilayer simulations, and occupancies and time-series of bilayer-STARD2 cation-π interactions.
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