How hydrophobicity, side chains, and salt affect the dimensions of disordered proteins

Author:

Baxa Michael C.1ORCID,Lin Xiaoxuan1ORCID,Mukinay Cedrick D.2,Chakravarthy Srinivas3,Sachleben Joseph R.4,Antilla Sarah5,Hartrampf Nina6,Riback Joshua A.7,Gagnon Isabelle A.1,Pentelute Bradley L.6,Clark Patricia L.2ORCID,Sosnick Tobin R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology The University of Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

2. Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry University of Notre Dame Notre Dame Indiana USA

3. Biophysics Collaborative Access Team (BioCAT), Center for Synchrotron Radiation Research and Instrumentation and Department of Biological and Chemical Sciences Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago Illinois USA

4. Division of Biological Sciences University of Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

5. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge Massachusetts USA

6. Department of Chemistry Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge Massachusetts USA

7. Graduate Program in Biophysical Science University of Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractDespite the generally accepted role of the hydrophobic effect as the driving force for folding, many intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs), including those with hydrophobic content typical of foldable proteins, behave nearly as self‐avoiding random walks (SARWs) under physiological conditions. Here, we tested how temperature and ionic conditions influence the dimensions of the N‐terminal domain of pertactin (PNt), an IDP with an amino acid composition typical of folded proteins. While PNt contracts somewhat with temperature, it nevertheless remains expanded over 10–58°C, with a Flory exponent, ν, >0.50. Both low and high ionic strength also produce contraction in PNt, but this contraction is mitigated by reducing charge segregation. With 46% glycine and low hydrophobicity, the reduced form of snow flea anti‐freeze protein (red‐sfAFP) is unaffected by temperature and ionic strength and persists as a near‐SARW, ν ~ 0.54, arguing that the thermal contraction of PNt is due to stronger interactions between hydrophobic side chains. Additionally, red‐sfAFP is a proxy for the polypeptide backbone, which has been thought to collapse in water. Increasing the glycine segregation in red‐sfAFP had minimal effect on ν. Water remained a good solvent even with 21 consecutive glycine residues (ν > 0.5), and red‐sfAFP variants lacked stable backbone hydrogen bonds according to hydrogen exchange. Similarly, changing glycine segregation has little impact on ν in other glycine‐rich proteins. These findings underscore the generality that many disordered states can be expanded and unstructured, and that the hydrophobic effect alone is insufficient to drive significant chain collapse for typical protein sequences.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institutes of Health

W. M. Keck Foundation

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

Wiley

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