Distinctive Communication Networks in Inactive States of Beta(2)-Adrenergic Receptor: Mutual Information and Entropy Transfer Analysis

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Date

2020

Authors

Soğünmez, Nuray
Akten, Ebru Demet

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

5

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2

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No
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Top 10%
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Average
Popularity
Top 10%

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Abstract

Mutual information and entropy transfer analysis employed on two inactive states of human beta-2 adrenergic receptor (beta(2)-AR) unraveled distinct communication pathways. Previously, a so-called "highly" inactive state of the receptor was observed during 1.5 microsecond long molecular dynamics simulation where the largest intracellular loop (ICL3) was swiftly packed onto the G-protein binding cavity, becoming entirely inaccessible. Mutual information quantifying the degree of correspondence between backbone-C(alpha)fluctuations was mostly shared between intra- and extra-cellular loop regions in the original inactive state, but shifted to entirely different regions in this latest inactive state. Interestingly, the largest amount of mutual information was always shared among the mobile regions. Irrespective of the conformational state, polar residues always contributed more to mutual information than hydrophobic residues, and also the number of polar-polar residue pairs shared the highest degree of mutual information compared to those incorporating hydrophobic residues. Entropy transfer, quantifying the correspondence between backbone-C(alpha)fluctuations at different timesteps, revealed a distinctive pathway directed from the extracellular site toward intracellular portions in this recently exposed inactive state for which the direction of information flow was the reverse of that observed in the original inactive state where the mobile ICL3 and its intracellular surroundings drove the future fluctuations of extracellular regions.

Description

Keywords

Communication pathway, Entropy transfer, G-protein binding site, Mobility, Mutual information, Orthosteric ligand-binding site, Mobility, Protein Conformation, alpha-Helical, G-protein binding site, Entropy, Amino Acid Motifs, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Ligands, Mutual information, GTP-Binding Proteins, Communication pathway, Humans, Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs, Receptors, Adrenergic, beta-2, Entropy transfer, Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions, Allosteric Site, Orthosteric ligand-binding site, Protein Binding

Fields of Science

0301 basic medicine, 0303 health sciences, 03 medical and health sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q2

Scopus Q

Q2
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OpenCitations Citation Count
7

Source

Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics

Volume

88

Issue

Start Page

1458

End Page

1471
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Citations

CrossRef : 3

Scopus : 7

PubMed : 1

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Mendeley Readers : 14

SCOPUS™ Citations

7

checked on Feb 11, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

6

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Page Views

6

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Downloads

46

checked on Feb 11, 2026

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