Large scale cardiac modeling on the Blue Gene supercomputer
Matthias Reumann, Blake G. Fitch, et al.
EMBC 2008
Rhodopsin, the G protein-coupled receptor primarily responsible for sensing light, is found in an environment rich in polyunsaturated lipid chains and cholesterol. Biophysical experiments have shown that lipid unsaturation and cholesterol both have significant effects on rhodopsin's stability and function; ω-3 polyunsaturated chains, such as docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), destabilize rhodopsin and enhance the kinetics of the photocycle, whereas cholesterol has the opposite effect. Here, we use molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the possibility that polyunsaturated chains modulate rhodopsin stability and kinetics via specific direct interactions. By analyzing the results of 26 independent 100-ns simulations of dark-adapted rhodopsin, we found that DHA routinely forms tight associations with the protein in a small number of specific locations qualitatively different from the non-specific interactions made by saturated chains and cholesterol. Furthermore, the presence of tightly packed DHA molecules tends to weaken the interhelical packing. These results are consistent with recent NMR work, which proposes that rhodopsin binds DHA, and they suggest a molecular rationale for DHA's effects on rhodopsin stability and kinetics. © 2006 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.
Matthias Reumann, Blake G. Fitch, et al.
EMBC 2008
Jagjeet S. Mnpotra, Zhuanhong Qiao, et al.
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Bernard J. Pope, Blake G. Fitch, et al.
EMBC 2011
Bernard J. Pope, Blake G. Fitch, et al.
IEEE T-BME