Confinement dependence of protein-associated solvent dynamics around different classes of proteins, from the EPR spin probe perspective

Protein function is modulated by coupled solvent fluctuations, subject to the degree of confinement from the surroundings. To identify universal features of the external confinement effect, the temperature dependence of the dynamics of protein-associated solvent over 200-265 K for proteins represent...

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Published inPhysical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP Vol. 24; no. 38; pp. 23919 - 23928
Main Authors Li, Wei, Whitcomb, Katie Lynn, Warncke, Kurt
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Royal Society of Chemistry 05.10.2022
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Summary:Protein function is modulated by coupled solvent fluctuations, subject to the degree of confinement from the surroundings. To identify universal features of the external confinement effect, the temperature dependence of the dynamics of protein-associated solvent over 200-265 K for proteins representative of different classes and sizes is characterized by using the rotational correlation time (detection bandwidth, 10 −10 -10 −7 s) of the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR, X-band) spin probe, TEMPOL, which is restricted to regions vicinal to protein in frozen aqueous solution. Weak (protein surrounded by aqueous-dimethylsulfoxide cryosolvent mesodomain) and strong (no added crysolvent) conditions of ice boundary confinement are imposed. The panel of soluble proteins represents large and small oligomeric (ethanolamine ammonia-lyase, 488 kDa; streptavidin, 52.8 kDa) and monomeric (myoglobin, 16.7 kDa) globular proteins, an intrinsically disordered protein (IDP, β-casein, 24.0 kDa), an unstructured peptide (protamine, 4.38 kDa) and a small peptide with partial backbone order (amyloid-β residues 1-16, 1.96 kDa). Expanded and condensate structures of β-casein and protamine are resolved by the spin probe under weak and strong confinement, respectively. At each confinement condition, the soluble globular proteins display common T -dependences of rotational correlation times and normalized weights, for two mobility components, protein-associated domain, PAD, and surrounding mesodomain. Strong confinement induces a detectable PAD component and emulation of globular protein T -dependence by the amyloid-β peptide. Confinement uniformly impacts soluble globular protein PAD dynamics, and is therefore a generic control parameter for modulation of soluble globular protein function. Confinement uniformly impacts the protein-associated solvent domain dynamics of soluble proteins.
Bibliography:dependence of the TEMPOL EPR spectrum in the presence of SA in the absence and presence of biotin, and Arrhenius plots and linear fits for Region III for weak and strong confinement. Tables provide a summary of protein sample and mesodomain parameters, rotational correlation times for canonical regimes of spin label motion, the mean log
values at different
c
T
τ
and
W
and mesodomain at low
https://doi.org/10.1039/d2cp03047k
values under weak and strong confinement for each protein, and rotational correlation times for EAL, Aβ16 and TEMPOL in solution at room
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Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Figures show the TEMPOL EPR spectra and simulations for canonical regimes of spin label motion, protein structure prediction certainty for Cas
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K.W. wrote the manuscript with critical review and commentary from W. L. and K. L. W. W. L. and K. L. W. conducted the research and investigation process, and specifically, performing sample preparation and EPR experiments. W. L. and K. L. W. conducted EPR simulations. All authors contributed to the analysis of the experimental data and simulation results.
Author contributions
ISSN:1463-9076
1463-9084
1463-9084
DOI:10.1039/d2cp03047k