Engineering Order and Cooperativity in a Disordered Protein
Author(s) -
Sneha Munshi,
Sandhyaa Subramanian,
Samyuktha Ramesh,
Hemashree Golla,
K. Divakar,
Kulkarni Madhurima,
Luis A. Campos,
Ashok Sekhar,
Athi N. Naganathan
Publication year - 2019
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.9b00182
Subject(s) - cooperativity , cooperative binding , folding (dsp implementation) , static electricity , protein folding , chemistry , hydrophobic effect , mutant , biophysics , protein structure , native state , function (biology) , dna , protein engineering , protein design , mutation , crystallography , chemical physics , binding site , biology , genetics , biochemistry , physics , enzyme , quantum mechanics , electrical engineering , gene , engineering
Structural disorder in proteins arises from a complex interplay between weak hydrophobicity and unfavorable electrostatic interactions. The extent to which the hydrophobic effect contributes to the unique and compact native state of proteins is, however, confounded by large compensation between multiple entropic and energetic terms. Here we show that protein structural order and cooperativity arise as emergent properties upon hydrophobic substitutions in a disordered system with non-intuitive effects on folding and function. Aided by sequence-structure analysis, equilibrium, and kinetic spectroscopic studies, we engineer two hydrophobic mutations in the disordered DNA-binding domain of CytR that act synergistically, but not in isolation, to promote structure, compactness, and stability. The double mutant, with properties of a fully ordered domain, exhibits weak cooperativity with a complex and rugged conformational landscape. The mutant, however, binds cognate DNA with an affinity only marginally higher than that of the wild type, though nontrivial differences are observed in the binding to noncognate DNA. Our work provides direct experimental evidence of the dominant role of non-additive hydrophobic effects in shaping the molecular evolution of order in disordered proteins and vice versa, which could be generalized to even folded proteins with implications for protein design and functional manipulation.
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