Kalani, Mohamad R.; Moradi, Abdulvahab; Moradi, Mahmoud; Tajkhorshid, Emad
Characterizing a Histidine Switch Controlling pH-Dependent Conformational Changes of the Influenza Virus Hemagglutinin
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 105:993-1003, AUG 20 2013

During the fusion of the influenza virus to the host cell, bending of the HA2 chain of hemagglutinin into a hairpin-shaped structure in a pH-dependent manner facilitates the fusion of the viral envelope and the endosomal membrane. To characterize the structural and dynamical responses of the hinge region of HA2 to pH changes and examine the role of a conserved histidine in this region (the hinge histidine), we have performed an extensive set of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of 26-residue peptides encompassing the hinge regions of several hemagglutinin subtypes under both neutral and low pH conditions, modeled by the change of the protonation state of the hinge histidine. More than 70 sets of MD simulations (collectively amounting to 25.1 mu s) were performed in both implicit and explicit solvents to study the effect of histidine protonation on structural dynamics of the hinge region. In both explicit and implicit solvent simulations, hinge bending was consistently observed upon the protonation of the histidine in all the simulations starting with an initial straight helical conformation, whereas the systems with a neutral histidine retained their primarily straight conformation throughout the simulations. Conversely, the MD simulations starting from an initially bent conformation resulted in the formation of a straight helical structure upon the neutralization of the hinge histidine, whereas the bent structure was maintained when the hinge histidine remained protonated. Finally, mutation of the hinge histidine to alanine abolishes the bending response of the peptide altogether. A molecular mechanism based on the interaction of the hinge histidine with neighboring acidic residues is proposed to be responsible for its role in controlling the conformation of the hinge. We propose that this might present a common mechanism for pH-controlled structural changes in helical structures when histidines act as the pH sensor.

DOI:10.1016/j.bpj.2013.06.047

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