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Specificity and Affinity Quantification of Flexible Recognition from Underlying Energy Landscape Topography

Overview of attention for article published in PLoS Computational Biology, August 2014
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Title
Specificity and Affinity Quantification of Flexible Recognition from Underlying Energy Landscape Topography
Published in
PLoS Computational Biology, August 2014
DOI 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003782
Pubmed ID
Authors

Xiakun Chu, Jin Wang

Abstract

Flexibility in biomolecular recognition is essential and critical for many cellular activities. Flexible recognition often leads to moderate affinity but high specificity, in contradiction with the conventional wisdom that high affinity and high specificity are coupled. Furthermore, quantitative understanding of the role of flexibility in biomolecular recognition is still challenging. Here, we meet the challenge by quantifying the intrinsic biomolecular recognition energy landscapes with and without flexibility through the underlying density of states. We quantified the thermodynamic intrinsic specificity by the topography of the intrinsic binding energy landscape and the kinetic specificity by association rate. We found that the thermodynamic and kinetic specificity are strongly correlated. Furthermore, we found that flexibility decreases binding affinity on one hand, but increases binding specificity on the other hand, and the decreasing or increasing proportion of affinity and specificity are strongly correlated with the degree of flexibility. This shows more (less) flexibility leads to weaker (stronger) coupling between affinity and specificity. Our work provides a theoretical foundation and quantitative explanation of the previous qualitative studies on the relationship among flexibility, affinity and specificity. In addition, we found that the folding energy landscapes are more funneled with binding, indicating that binding helps folding during the recognition. Finally, we demonstrated that the whole binding-folding energy landscapes can be integrated by the rigid binding and isolated folding energy landscapes under weak flexibility. Our results provide a novel way to quantify the affinity and specificity in flexible biomolecular recognition.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Canada 1 2%
Unknown 40 98%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 13 32%
Student > Master 9 22%
Researcher 7 17%
Student > Doctoral Student 3 7%
Student > Bachelor 2 5%
Other 4 10%
Unknown 3 7%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 12 29%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 12 29%
Physics and Astronomy 3 7%
Chemical Engineering 2 5%
Neuroscience 2 5%
Other 5 12%
Unknown 5 12%