Consistent View of Polypeptide Chain Expansion in Chemical Denaturants from Multiple Experimental Methods

There has been a long-standing controversy regarding the effect of chemical denaturants on the dimensions of unfolded and intrinsically disordered proteins: A wide range of experimental techniques suggest that polypeptide chains expand with increasing denaturant concentration, but several studies us...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of the American Chemical Society Vol. 138; no. 36; pp. 11714 - 11726
Main Authors Borgia, Alessandro, Zheng, Wenwei, Buholzer, Karin, Borgia, Madeleine B, Schüler, Anja, Hofmann, Hagen, Soranno, Andrea, Nettels, Daniel, Gast, Klaus, Grishaev, Alexander, Best, Robert B, Schuler, Benjamin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 14.09.2016
American Chemical Society (ACS)
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:There has been a long-standing controversy regarding the effect of chemical denaturants on the dimensions of unfolded and intrinsically disordered proteins: A wide range of experimental techniques suggest that polypeptide chains expand with increasing denaturant concentration, but several studies using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) have reported no such increase of the radius of gyration (R g). This inconsistency challenges our current understanding of the mechanism of chemical denaturants, which are widely employed to investigate protein folding and stability. Here, we use a combination of single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET), SAXS, dynamic light scattering (DLS), and two-focus fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (2f-FCS) to characterize the denaturant dependence of the unfolded state of the spectrin domain R17 and the intrinsically disordered protein ACTR in two different denaturants. Standard analysis of the primary data clearly indicates an expansion of the unfolded state with increasing denaturant concentration irrespective of the protein, denaturant, or experimental method used. This is the first case in which SAXS and FRET have yielded even qualitatively consistent results regarding expansion in denaturant when applied to the same proteins. To more directly illustrate this self-consistency, we used both SAXS and FRET data in a Bayesian procedure to refine structural ensembles representative of the observed unfolded state. This analysis demonstrates that both of these experimental probes are compatible with a common ensemble of protein configurations for each denaturant concentration. Furthermore, the resulting ensembles reproduce the trend of increasing hydrodynamic radius with denaturant concentration obtained by 2f-FCS and DLS. We were thus able to reconcile the results from all four experimental techniques quantitatively, to obtain a comprehensive structural picture of denaturant-induced unfolded state expansion, and to identify the most likely sources of earlier discrepancies.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
FOREIGN
Current address: Department of Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel
These authors contributed equally to this work
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b05917