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Polyanions Cause Protein Destabilization Similar to That in Live Cells
Author(s) -
Therese Sörensen,
Sarah Leeb,
Jens Danielsson,
Mikael Oliveberg
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.43
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1520-4995
pISSN - 0006-2960
DOI - 10.1021/acs.biochem.0c00889
Subject(s) - biophysics , chemistry , static electricity , nucleotide , denaturation (fissile materials) , intrinsically disordered proteins , kinetics , ion , protein folding , intracellular , folding (dsp implementation) , protein stability , sequence (biology) , crystallography , chemical physics , biochemistry , biology , physics , organic chemistry , engineering , quantum mechanics , nuclear chemistry , electrical engineering , gene
The structural stability of proteins is found to markedly change upon their transfer to the crowded interior of live cells. For some proteins, the stability increases, while for others, it decreases, depending on both the sequence composition and the type of host cell. The mechanism seems to be linked to the strength and conformational bias of the diffusive in-cell interactions, where protein charge is found to play a decisive role. Because most proteins, nucleotides, and membranes carry a net-negative charge, the intracellular environment behaves like a polyanionic ( Z :1) system with electrostatic interactions different from those of standard 1:1 ion solutes. To determine how such polyanion conditions influence protein stability, we use negatively charged polyacetate ions to mimic the net-negatively charged cellular environment. The results show that, per Na + equivalent, polyacetate destabilizes the model protein SOD1 barrel significantly more than monoacetate or NaCl. At an equivalent of 100 mM Na + , the polyacetate destabilization of SOD1 barrel is similar to that observed in live cells. By the combined use of equilibrium thermal denaturation, folding kinetics, and high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance, this destabilization is primarily assigned to preferential interaction between polyacetate and the globally unfolded protein. This interaction is relatively weak and involves mainly the outermost N-terminal region of unfolded SOD1 barrel . Our findings point thus to a generic influence of polyanions on protein stability, which adds to the sequence-specific contributions and needs to be considered in the evaluation of in vivo data.

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