The structural organization of the B1 domain of
streptococcal protein G (PGA) has been probed using molecular
dynamics simulations, with a particular emphasis on the
role of the solvent exposed Ile6 residue. In addition to
the native protein (WT-PGA), three single-mutants (I6G-PGA,
I6F-PGA, and I6T-PGA), one double-mutant (I6T,T53G-PGA),
and three isolated peptide fragments (corresponding to
the helix and the two β-hairpins) were studied in the
presence of explicit water molecules. Comparative analysis
of the various systems showed that the level of perturbation
was directly related to the hydrophobicity and the size
of the side chain of residue 6, the internal rigidity of
the proteins decreasing in the order I6T-PGA > I6G-PGA
> WT-PGA > I6F-PGA. The results emphasized the importance
of residue 6 in controlling both the integrity of the sheet's
surface and the orientation of the helix in relation to
the sheet by modulation of surface/core interactions. The
effects of mutations were delocalized across the structure,
and glycine residues, in particular, absorbed most of the
introduced strain. A qualitative structural decomposition
of the native fold into elementary building-blocks was
achieved using principal component analysis and mechanical
response matrices. Within this framework, internal motions
of the protein were described as coordinated articulations
of these structural units, mutations affecting mostly the
amplitude of the motions rather than the structure/location
of the building-blocks. Analysis of the isolated peptidic
fragments suggested that packing did not play a determinant
role in defining the elementary building-blocks, but that
chain topology was mostly responsible.