The solvation layer
surrounding a protein is clearly an intrinsic
part of protein structure–dynamics–function, and our
understanding of how the hydration dynamics influences protein function
is emerging. We have recently reported simulations indicating a correlation
between regional hydration dynamics and the structure of the solvation
layer around different regions of the enzyme Candida
antarctica lipase B, wherein the radial distribution
function (RDF) was used to calculate the pairwise entropy, providing
a link between dynamics (diffusion) and thermodynamics (excess entropy)
known as Rosenfeld scaling. Regions with higher RDF values/peaks in
the hydration layer (the first peak, within 6 Å of the protein
surface) have faster diffusion in the hydration layer. The finding
thus hinted at a handle for rapid evaluation of hydration dynamics
at different regions on the protein surface in molecular dynamics
simulations. Such an approach may move the analysis of hydration dynamics
from a specialized venture to routine analysis, enabling an informatics
approach to evaluate the role of hydration dynamics in biomolecular
function. This paper first confirms that the correlation between regional
diffusive dynamics and hydration layer structure (via water center
of mass around protein side-chain atom RDF) is observed as a general
relationship across a set of proteins. Second, it seeks to devise
an approach for rapid analysis of hydration dynamics, determining
the minimum amount of information and computational effort required
to get a reliable value of hydration dynamics from structural data
in MD simulations based on the protein–water RDF. A linear
regression model using the integral of the hydration layer in the
water–protein RDF was found to provide statistically equivalent
apparent diffusion coefficients at the 95% confidence level for a
set of 92 regions within five different proteins. In summary, RDF
analysis of 10 ns of data after simulation convergence is sufficient
to accurately map regions of fast and slow hydration dynamics around
a protein surface. Additionally, it is anticipated that a quick look
at protein–water RDFs, comparing peak heights, will be useful
to provide a qualitative ranking of regions of faster and slower hydration
dynamics at the protein surface for rapid analysis when investigating
the role of solvent dynamics in protein function.
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