Publications by authors named "Jerome Henin"

Colvars is an open-source C++ library that provides a modular toolkit for collective-variable-based molecular simulations. It allows practitioners to easily create and implement descriptors that best fit a process of interest and to apply a wide range of biasing algorithms in collective variable space. This paper reviews several features and improvements to Colvars that were added since its original introduction.

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We introduce the lambda-Adaptive Biasing Force (lambda-ABF) method for the computation of alchemical free-energy differences. We propose a software implementation and showcase it on biomolecular systems. The method arises from coupling multiple-walker adaptive biasing force with λ-dynamics.

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Membrane proteins have diverse functions within cells and are well-established drug targets. The advances in membrane protein structural biology have revealed drug and lipid binding sites on membrane proteins, while computational methods such as molecular simulations can resolve the thermodynamic basis of these interactions. Particularly, alchemical free energy calculations have shown promise in the calculation of reliable and reproducible binding free energies of protein-ligand and protein-lipid complexes in membrane-associated systems.

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In molecular dynamics simulations in the NPT ensemble at constant pressure, the size and shape of the periodic simulation box fluctuate with time. For particle images far from the origin, the rescaling of the box by the barostat results in unbounded position displacements. Special care is thus required when a particle trajectory is unwrapped from a projection into the central box under periodic boundary conditions to a trajectory in full three-dimensional space, e.

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Article Synopsis
  • Brown adipose tissue utilizes uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) to produce heat, making it a potential target for metabolic disorder treatments.
  • Research reveals that purine nucleotides like GDP and GTP inhibit UCP1's respiration uncoupling by binding at a specific site, with key interactions involving certain amino acids.
  • Mutations in specific residues (I187A and W281A) enhance UCP1 activity, highlighting how these changes can lead to increased uncoupling even in the presence of purine nucleotides.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study focuses on how pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (pLGICs), which help in synaptic transmission, are influenced by their surrounding lipid environment, especially phospholipids.
  • - Researchers highlight the positive modulation of the ELIC channel by the anionic phospholipid, phosphatidylglycerol, discovering that it binds uniquely when the channel is in an open state.
  • - Through structural analysis and calculations, the study suggests that phosphatidylglycerol stabilizes the open state of the ELIC channel, providing insight into the molecular mechanisms of lipid modulation in pLGICs.
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The binding of divalent cations to the ubiquitous phosphate group is essential for a number of key biological processes, such as DNA compaction, RNA folding, or interactions of some proteins with membranes. Yet, probing their binding sites, modes, and associated binding free energy is a challenge for both experiments and simulations. In simulations, standard force fields strongly overestimate the interaction between phosphate groups and divalent cations.

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Binding free energy calculations rely critically on a precise definition of the bound state and well-designed ligand restraints to ensure that binding free energy calculations converge rapidly and yield estimates of well-defined thermodynamic quantities. The distance-to-bound-configuration (DBC) is a single variable that can precisely delineate the bound state of a ligand including translational, rotational and conformational degrees of freedom and has been successfully used to capture binding modes with complex geometries. DBC is defined as the root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) of ligand coordinates in the frame of reference of the binding site.

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The Collective Variables Dashboard is a software tool for real-time, seamless exploration of molecular structures and trajectories in a customizable space of collective variables. The Dashboard arises from the integration of the Collective Variables Module (also known as Colvars) with the visualization software VMD, augmented with a fully discoverable graphical interface offering interactive workflows for the design and analysis of collective variables. Typical use cases include a priori design of collective variables for enhanced sampling and free energy simulations as well as analysis of any type of simulation or collection of structures in a collective variable space.

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The malfunction of the methyl-CpG binding protein 2 (MeCP2) is associated with the Rett syndrome, one of the most common causes of cognitive impairment in females. MeCP2 is an intrinsically disordered protein (IDP), making its experimental characterization a challenge. There is currently no structure available for the full-length MeCP2 in any of the databases, and only the structure of its MBD domain has been solved.

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Enhanced sampling and free energy calculation algorithms of the thermodynamic integration family (such as the adaptive biasing force (ABF) method) are not based on the direct computation of a free energy surface but rather of its gradient. Integrating the free energy surface is nontrivial in dimensions higher than one. Here, the author introduces a flexible, portable implementation of a Poisson equation formalism to integrate free energy surfaces from estimated gradients in dimensions 2 and 3 using any combination of periodic and nonperiodic (Neumann) boundary conditions.

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NOX5 is a member of the NADPH oxidase family which is dedicated to the production of reactive oxygen species. The molecular mechanisms governing transmembrane electron transfer (ET) that permits to shuttle electrons over the biological membrane have remained elusive for a long time. Using computer simulations, we report conformational dynamics of NOX5 embedded within a realistic membrane environment.

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In spite of the biological importance of the binding of Zn2+, Ca2+, and Mg2+ to the carboxylate group, cation-acetate binding affinities and binding modes remain actively debated. Here, we report the first use of Raman multivariate curve resolution (Raman-MCR) vibrational spectroscopy to obtain self-consistent free and bound metal acetate spectra and one-to-one binding constants, without the need to invoke any a priori assumptions regarding the shapes of the corresponding vibrational bands. The experimental results, combined with classical molecular dynamics simulations with a force field effectively accounting for electronic polarization via charge scaling and ab initio simulations, indicate that the measured binding constants pertain to direct (as opposed to water separated) ion pairing.

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NAMDis a molecular dynamics program designed for high-performance simulations of very large biological objects on CPU- and GPU-based architectures. NAMD offers scalable performance on petascale parallel supercomputers consisting of hundreds of thousands of cores, as well as on inexpensive commodity clusters commonly found in academic environments. It is written in C++ and leans on Charm++ parallel objects for optimal performance on low-latency architectures.

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The theory of receptor-ligand binding equilibria has long been well-established in biochemistry, and was primarily constructed to describe dilute aqueous solutions. Accordingly, few computational approaches have been developed for making quantitative predictions of binding probabilities in environments other than dilute isotropic solution. Existing techniques, ranging from simple automated docking procedures to sophisticated thermodynamics-based methods, have been developed with soluble proteins in mind.

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Anesthetic drug molecules are being increasingly studied through the use of computational methods such as molecular dynamics (MD). Molecular mechanics force fields require the investigator to supply parameters for the force field equation, which are not available for novel molecules. Careful selection of these parameters is critical for simulations to produce meaningful results.

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To improve sampling of the configurational entropy change upon protein-ligand binding, we have introduced a new set of coarse variables describing the relative orientation and position of the ligand via a global macromolecular orientational procedure, onto which geometrical restraints are applied. Evaluating the potential of mean force for the different coarse variables, the experimental standard binding free energy for three decapeptides associated with the SH3 domain of the Abl kinase is reproduced quantitatively.

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Mitofusins are large transmembrane GTPases of the dynamin-related protein family, and are required for the tethering and fusion of mitochondrial outer membranes. Their full-length structures remain unknown, which is a limiting factor in the study of outer membrane fusion. We investigated the structure and dynamics of the yeast mitofusin Fzo1 through a hybrid computational and experimental approach, combining molecular modelling and all-atom molecular dynamics simulations in a lipid bilayer with site-directed mutagenesis and in vivo functional assays.

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We report a theoretical description and numerical tests of the extended-system adaptive biasing force method (eABF), together with an unbiased estimator of the free energy surface from eABF dynamics. Whereas the original ABF approach uses its running estimate of the free energy gradient as the adaptive biasing force, eABF is built on the idea that the exact free energy gradient is not necessary for efficient exploration, and that it is still possible to recover the exact free energy separately with an appropriate estimator. eABF does not directly bias the collective coordinates of interest, but rather fictitious variables that are harmonically coupled to them; therefore is does not require second derivative estimates, making it easily applicable to a wider range of problems than ABF.

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Propofol, an intravenous anesthetic, is a positive modulator of the GABAA receptor, but the mechanistic details, including the relevant binding sites and alternative targets, remain disputed. Here we undertook an in-depth study of alkylphenol-based anesthetic binding to synaptic membranes. We designed, synthesized, and characterized a chemically active alkylphenol anesthetic (2-((prop-2-yn-1-yloxy)methyl)-5-(3-(trifluoromethyl)-3H-diazirin-3-yl)phenol, AziPm-click (1)), for affinity-based protein profiling (ABPP) of propofol-binding proteins in their native state within mouse synaptosomes.

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Pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (pLGICs) are ubiquitous neurotransmitter receptors in Bilateria, with a small number of known prokaryotic homologues. Here we describe a new inventory and phylogenetic analysis of pLGIC genes across all kingdoms of life. Our main finding is a set of pLGIC genes in unicellular eukaryotes, some of which are metazoan-like Cys-loop receptors, and others devoid of Cys-loop cysteines, like their prokaryotic relatives.

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Membrane proteins mediate processes that are fundamental for the flourishing of biological cells. Membrane-embedded transporters move ions and larger solutes across membranes; receptors mediate communication between the cell and its environment and membrane-embedded enzymes catalyze chemical reactions. Understanding these mechanisms of action requires knowledge of how the proteins couple to their fluid, hydrated lipid membrane environment.

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Pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (pLGICs) play a central role in intercellular communications in the nervous system by converting the binding of a chemical messenger—a neurotransmitter—into an ion flux through the postsynaptic membrane. They are oligomeric assemblies that provide prototypical examples of allosterically regulated integral membrane proteins. Here, we present an overview of the most recent advances on the signal transduction mechanism based on the X-ray structures of both prokaryotic and invertebrate eukaryotic pLGICs and atomistic Molecular Dynamics simulations.

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In this work, we address the question of whether the enhanced stability of thermophilic proteins has a direct connection with internal hydration. Our model systems are two homologous G domains of different stability: the mesophilic G domain of the elongation factor thermal unstable protein from E. coli and the hyperthermophilic G domain of the EF-1α protein from S.

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In the host of numerical schemes devised to calculate free energy differences by way of geometric transformations, the adaptive biasing force algorithm has emerged as a promising route to map complex free-energy landscapes. It relies upon the simple concept that as a simulation progresses, a continuously updated biasing force is added to the equations of motion, such that in the long-time limit it yields a Hamiltonian devoid of an average force acting along the transition coordinate of interest. This means that sampling proceeds uniformly on a flat free-energy surface, thus providing reliable free-energy estimates.

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