(TKP2021-EGA-23) Támogató: Innovációs és Technológiai Minisztérium
(HSN261201500003I)
The small GTPase Ran is the main regulator of the nucleo-cytoplasmic import and export
through the nuclear pore complex. It functions as a molecular switch cycling between
the GDP-bound inactive and GTP-bound active state. It consists of a globular (G) domain
and a C-terminal region, which is bound to the G-domain in the inactive, GDP-bound
states. Crystal structures of the GTP-bound active form complexed with Ran binding
proteins (RanBP) show that the C-terminus undergoes a large conformational change,
embracing Ran binding domains (RanBD). Whereas in the crystal structures of macromolecular
complexes not containing RanBDs the structure of the C-terminal segment remains unresolved,
indicating its large conformational flexibility. This movement could not have been
followed either by experimental or simulation methods. Here, starting from the crystal
structure of Ran in both GDP- and GTP-bound forms we show how rigid the C-terminal
region in the inactive structure is during molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Furthermore,
we show how MD simulations of the active form are incapable of mapping the open conformations
of the C-terminus. By using the MDeNM (Molecular Dynamics with excited Normal Modes)
method, we were able to widely map the conformational surface of the C-terminus of
Ran in the active GTP-bound form, which allows us to envisage how it can embrace RanBDs.