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      Ultraslow water-mediated transmembrane interactions regulate the activation of A\(_{\text{2A}}\) adenosine receptor

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          Abstract

          Water molecules inside G-protein coupled receptor have recently been spotlighted in a series of crystal structures. To decipher the dynamics and functional roles of internal waters in GPCR activity, we studied A\(_{\text{2A}}\) adenosine receptor using \(\mu\)sec-molecular dynamics simulations. Our study finds that the amount of water flux across the transmembrane (TM) domain varies depending on the receptor state, and that the water molecules of the TM channel in the active state flow three times slower than those in the inactive state. Depending on the location in solvent-protein interface as well as the receptor state, the average residence time of water in each residue varies from \(\sim\mathcal{O}(10^2)\) psec to \(\sim\mathcal{O}(10^2)\) nsec. Especially, water molecules, exhibiting ultraslow relaxation (\(\sim\mathcal{O}(10^2)\) nsec) in the active state, are found around the microswitch residues that are considered activity hotspots for GPCR function. A continuous allosteric network spanning the TM domain, arising from water-mediated contacts, is unique in the active state, underscoring the importance of slow waters in the GPCR activation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2016-08-04
          Article
          1608.01473
          3fe34027-3e8e-4b1c-afdf-cc83a2db1055

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          Custom metadata
          21 pages, 14 figures
          q-bio.BM

          Molecular biology
          Molecular biology

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