Capturing Histone Tails Motion using all-atom Replica-Exchange with Solute Tempering (REST2) Simulations

03 November 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Full-length histone tails play a well characterized role in nucleosome core particles, and, as intrinsically disordered peptides, represent a current challenge for all-atom molecular dynamics simulations. Beyond the choice of the force field, the folding and the subsequent interactions with DNA landscape is complex and calls for a robust computational protocol capable of reproducibility. In this contribution, we assessed by a specifically tailored REST2-based simulation protocol the interaction between the four canonical histone tails and a DNA fragment from a canonical nucleosome core particles. We report contact maps obtained by clus- tering along several microseconds which prefigure plausible interactions between some of the positively-charged residues and DNA. Two major post-translational modifica- tions of lysines are also discussed. Our work thus contributes to pave the way toward a robust in silico predictive tool for DNA-histone tails interactions which remain ex- perimentally difficult to assess although of key importance in Biochemistry.

Keywords

Intrinsically disordered protein
Nucleosome
Replica-Exchange
Molecular dynamics simulations

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Capturing Histone Tails Motion using all-atom Replica-Exchange with Solute Tempering (REST2) Simulations
Description
Additional information concerning the system building. Cluster representative conformations and contact map for H4 and H3 tails with PTMs.
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