Display omitted
•Protein disorder is highly over-represented within transcriptional processes.•Protein disorder may accelerate binding, unbinding and/or DNA search processes.•Flexible linkers, ...auto-inhibitory tails and promiscuity enhance network complexity.•Post-translational modification and allostery allow context-specific transcription.•Nuclear bodies contain low-complexity disordered proteins and nucleic acids.
Understanding the interactions of proteins involved in transcriptional regulation is critical to describing biological systems because they control the expression profile of the cell. Yet sadly they belong to a less well biophysically characterized subset of proteins; they frequently contain long disordered regions that are highly dynamic. A key question therefore is, why? What functional roles does protein disorder play in transcriptional regulation? Experimental data exemplifying these roles are starting to emerge, with common themes being enabling complexity within networks and quick responses. Most recently a role for disorder in mediating phase transitions of membrane-less organelles has been proposed.
The mechanisms by which intrinsically disordered proteins engage in rapid and highly selective binding is a subject of considerable interest and represents a central paradigm to nuclear pore complex ...(NPC) function, where nuclear transport receptors (NTRs) move through the NPC by binding disordered phenylalanine-glycine-rich nucleoporins (FG-Nups). Combining single-molecule fluorescence, molecular simulations, and nuclear magnetic resonance, we show that a rapidly fluctuating FG-Nup populates an ensemble of conformations that are prone to bind NTRs with near diffusion-limited on rates, as shown by stopped-flow kinetic measurements. This is achieved using multiple, minimalistic, low-affinity binding motifs that are in rapid exchange when engaging with the NTR, allowing the FG-Nup to maintain an unexpectedly high plasticity in its bound state. We propose that these exceptional physical characteristics enable a rapid and specific transport mechanism in the physiological context, a notion supported by single molecule in-cell assays on intact NPCs.
Display omitted
•Integrative structural biology reveals the basis of rapid nuclear transport•Transient binding of disordered nucleoporins leaves their plasticity unaffected•Multiple minimalistic low-affinity binding motifs create a polyvalent complex•A highly reactive and dynamic surface permits an ultrafast binding mechanism
Intrinsically disordered nucleoporins (Nups) engage rapidly with nuclear transport receptors through many minimalistic, weakly binding motifs. These Nups form polyvalent complexes while retaining conformational plasticity thus ensuring both rapid and specific transport.
The self-assembly of proteins and peptides into polymeric amyloid fibrils is a process that has important implications ranging from the understanding of protein misfolding disorders to the discovery ...of novel nanobiomaterials. In this study, we probe the stability of fibrils prepared at pH 2.0 and composed of the protein insulin by manipulating electrostatic interactions within the fibril architecture. We demonstrate that strong electrostatic repulsion is sufficient to disrupt the hydrogen-bonded, cross-β network that links insulin molecules and ultimately results in fibril dissociation. The extent of this dissociation correlates well with predictions for colloidal models considering the net global charge of the polypeptide chain, although the kinetics of the process is regulated by the charge state of a single amino acid. We found the fibrils to be maximally stable under their formation conditions. Partial disruption of the cross-β network under conditions where the fibrils remain intact leads to a reduction in their stability. Together, these results support the contention that a major determinant of amyloid stability stems from the interactions in the structured core, and show how the control of electrostatic interactions can be used to characterize the factors that modulate fibril stability.
Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are known to undergo a range of posttranslational modifications, but by what mechanism do such modifications affect the binding of an IDP to its partner ...protein? We investigate this question using one such IDP, the kinase inducible domain (KID) of the transcription factor CREB, which interacts with the KIX domain of CREB-binding protein upon phosphorylation. As with many other IDPs, KID undergoes coupled folding and binding to form α-helical structure upon interacting with KIX. This single site phosphorylation plays an important role in the control of transcriptional activation in vivo. Here we show that, contrary to expectation, phosphorylation has no effect on association rates—unphosphorylated KID binds just as rapidly as pKID, the phosphorylated form—but rather, acts by increasing the lifetime of the complex. We propose that by controlling the lifetime of the bound complex of pKID:KIX via altering the dissociation rate, phosphorylation can facilitate effective control of transcription regulation.
Protein aggregation plays a key role in neurodegenerative disease, giving rise to small oligomers that may become cytotoxic to cells. The fundamental microscopic reactions taking place during ...aggregation, and their rate constants, have been difficult to determine due to lack of suitable methods to identify and follow the low concentration of oligomers over time. Here we use single-molecule fluorescence to study the aggregation of the repeat domain of tau (K18), and two mutant forms linked with familial frontotemporal dementia, the deletion mutant ΔK280 and the point mutant P301L. Our kinetic analysis reveals that aggregation proceeds via monomeric assembly into small oligomers, and a subsequent slow structural conversion step before fibril formation. Using this approach, we have been able to quantitatively determine how these mutations alter the aggregation energy landscape.
The kinase-inducible domain interacting (KIX) domain of CREB binding protein binds to multiple intrinsically disordered transcription factors in vivo at two distinct sites on its surface. Several ...reports have been made of allosteric communication between these two sites in this well-characterized model system. In this work, we have performed fluorescence stopped-flow measurements to investigate the kinetics of binding of five KIX binding proteins. We find that they all have similar association and dissociation rate constants for complex formation, despite their wide range of intrinsic helical propensities. Furthermore, by careful arrangement of pseudofirst-order conditions, we have been able to show that both association and dissociation rate constants are decreased when a partner is bound at the alternative site. These decreases suggest that positive allosteric effects are not mediated by structural changes in binding sites but rather, through a more general mechanism, largely mediated through dissociation, which we propose is largely related to changes in the flexibility of the KIX domain itself.
Significance Specific protein–protein interactions are abundant in, and essential for, cellular life. In contrast to the well-studied docking of two already folded proteins, it has been recently ...established that many proteins are disordered and unfolded in the absence of their partner protein, but appear folded once bound. Must these initially disordered proteins transiently fold in isolation before binding their partners? We examine a small disordered protein and find that interactions with its (already structured) partner protein are what cause the relatively unstructured protein to fold. Thus, the requirement for one protein to fold is not an obstacle for reliable, fast association between two proteins. This result offers some explanation for the abundance of similar protein–protein interactions throughout biology.
Protein–protein interactions are at the heart of regulatory and signaling processes in the cell. In many interactions, one or both proteins are disordered before association. However, this disorder in the unbound state does not prevent many of these proteins folding to a well-defined, ordered structure in the bound state. Here we examine a typical system, where a small disordered protein (PUMA, p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis) folds to an α-helix when bound to a groove on the surface of a folded protein (MCL-1, induced myeloid leukemia cell differentiation protein). We follow the association of these proteins using rapid-mixing stopped flow, and examine how the kinetic behavior is perturbed by denaturant and carefully chosen mutations. We demonstrate the utility of methods developed for the study of monomeric protein folding, including β-Tanford values, Leffler α, Φ-value analysis, and coarse-grained simulations, and propose a self-consistent mechanism for binding. Folding of the disordered protein before binding does not appear to be required and few, if any, specific interactions are required to commit to association. The majority of PUMA folding occurs after the transition state, in the presence of MCL-1. We also examine the role of the side chains of folded MCL-1 that make up the binding groove and find that many favor equilibrium binding but, surprisingly, inhibit the association process.
Association rates for interactions between folded proteins have been investigated extensively, allowing the development of computational and theoretical prediction methods. Less is known about ...association rates for complexes where one or more partner is initially disordered, despite much speculation about how they may compare to those for folded proteins. We have attached a fluorophore to the N-terminus of the 25 amino acid cMyb peptide used previously in NMR and equilibrium studies (termed FITC-cMyb), and used this to monitor the kinetics of its interaction with the KIX protein. We have investigated the ionic strength and temperature dependence of the kinetics, and conclude that the association process is extremely fast, apparently exceeding the rates predicted by formulations applicable to interactions between pairs of folded proteins. This is despite the fact that not all collisions result in complex formation (there is an observable activation energy for the association process). We propose that this is partially a result of the disordered nature of the FITC-cMyb peptide itself.
The molecular chaperone αB-crystallin is a small heat-shock protein that is upregulated in response to a multitude of stress stimuli, and is found colocalized with Aβ amyloid fibrils in the ...extracellular plaques that are characteristic of Alzheimer's disease. We investigated whether this archetypical small heat-shock protein has the ability to interact with Aβ fibrils in vitro. We find that αB-crystallin binds to wild-type Aβ42 fibrils with micromolar affinity, and also binds to fibrils formed from the E22G Arctic mutation of Aβ42. Immunoelectron microscopy confirms that binding occurs along the entire length and ends of the fibrils. Investigations into the effect of αB-crystallin on the seeded growth of Aβ fibrils, both in solution and on the surface of a quartz crystal microbalance biosensor, reveal that the binding of αB-crystallin to seed fibrils strongly inhibits their elongation. Because the lag phase in sigmoidal fibril assembly kinetics is dominated by elongation and fragmentation rates, the chaperone mechanism identified here represents a highly effective means to inhibit fibril proliferation. Together with previous observations of αB-crystallin interaction with α-synuclein and insulin fibrils, the results suggest that this mechanism is a generic means of providing molecular chaperone protection against amyloid fibril formation.
PUMA, which belongs to the BH3-only protein family, is an intrinsically disordered protein (IDP). It binds to its cellular partner Mcl-1 through its BH3 motif, which folds upon binding into an α ...helix. We have applied a structure-based coarse-grained model, with an explicit Debye-Hückel charge model, to probe the importance of electrostatic interactions both in the early and the later stages of this model coupled folding and binding process. This model was carefully calibrated with the experimental data on helical content and affinity, and shown to be consistent with previously published experimental data on binding rate changes with respect to ionic strength. We find that intramolecular electrostatic interactions influence the unbound states of PUMA only marginally. Our results further suggest that intermolecular electrostatic interactions, and in particular non-native electrostatic interactions, are involved in formation of the initial encounter complex. We are able to reveal the binding mechanism in more detail than is possible using experimental data alone however, and in particular we uncover the role of non-native electrostatic interactions. We highlight the potential importance of such electrostatic interactions for describing the binding reactions of IDPs. Such approaches could be used to provide predictions for the results of mutational studies.