In Silico Structural and Functional Analysis of the Mitochondrial Malate Transporters in Oleaginous Fungus Mucor circinelloides WJ11

Author:

Yang Wu12,Mohamed Hassan13ORCID,Shah Aabid Manzoor1,Zhang Huaiyuan1,Pang Shuxian1,Shi Wenyue1,Xue Futing1,Song Yuanda1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Colin Ratledge Center for Microbial Lipids, School of Agricultural Engineering and Food Science, Shandong University of Technology, Zibo 255049, China

2. School of Biology and Brewing Engineering, Taishan University, Taian 271000, China

3. Department of Botany and Microbiology, Faculty of Science, Al-Azhar University, Assiut 71524, Egypt

Abstract

Malate transporter proteins (MTPs) play a pivotal role in regulating flux in the citrate/malate/pyruvate shuttle to deliver acetyl-CoA from the mitochondria to the cytosol and thus regulate lipid biosynthesis in oleaginous fungi. Despite the recent successful exploration of the mitochondrial malate transporters in Mucor circinelloides, research with in silico analyses that include molecular docking and their dynamics, in addition to homology modelling of malate transporters, have not been reported. In this study, the physico-chemical properties and nucleotide sequence analysis of two mitochondrial MTPs (MT and SoDIT-a with Gene/protein ID scafold00018.48 and scafold00239.15, respectively), in M. circinelloides WJ11 were performed. The three-dimensional (3D) model of the mitochondrial MTPs was determined and the best-docked complex stabilities were demonstrated with molecular dynamic (MD) simulations. The activity domain was revealed to form hydrogen bonds and piling interactions with citrate and malate upon docking. Our study showed better binding affinities for the MTPs—reaching up to −3.44 and −7.27 kcal/mol with the MT and SoDIT-a proteins, respectively (compared to the target of −2.85 and −6.00 kcal/mol for citric acid-binding). MD simulations illustrated that the protein complexes demonstrated conformational stability throughout the simulation. This study was the first to elucidate the structural characteristics of mitochondrial MTPs in M. circinelloides WJ11, providing direct evidence regarding the transport mechanism of specific substrates. Furthermore, the current results support ongoing efforts to combine functional and structural data to better understand the MTPs (at the molecular and atomic levels) of an oleaginous fungus such as M. circinelloides.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

TaiShan Industrial Experts Programme

Shandong provincial key technology R&D plan

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Catalysis,General Environmental Science

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