Combining Well-Tempered Metadynamics Simulation and SPR Assays to Characterize the Binding Mechanism of the Universal T-Lymphocyte Tetanus Toxin Epitope TT830-843
2021
Peptide TT830-843 from the tetanus toxin is a universal T-cell epitope. It helps in vaccination and induces T-cell activation.
However, the fine molecular interaction between this antigen and the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) remains
unknown. Molecular analysis of its interaction with murine MHC (H-2) was proposed to explore its immune response
efficiency. Molecular dynamics simulations are important mechanisms for understanding the basis of protein-ligand
interactions, and metadynamics is a useful technique for enhancing sampling in molecular dynamics. SPR (surface plasmon
resonance) assays were used to validate whether the metadynamics results are in accordance with the experimental results. The
peptide TT830-843 unbinding process was simulated, and the free energy surface reconstruction revealed a detailed
conformational landscape. The simulation described the exiting path as a stepwise mechanism between progressive detachment
states. We pointed out how the terminus regions act as anchors for binding and how the detachment mechanism includes the
opening of α-helices to permit the peptide’s central region dissociation. The results indicated the peptide/H-2 receptor
encounter occurs within a distance lesser than 27.5 A, and the encounter can evolve to form a stable complex. SPR assays
confirmed the complex peptide/H-2 as a thermodynamically stable system, exhibiting enough free energy to interact with TCR
on the antigen-presenting cell surface. Therefore, combining in silico and in vitro assays provided significant evidence to
support the peptide/H-2 complex formation.
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