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Optimizing the liquid reaction phase holds significant potential for enhancing the efficiency of biocatalytic pro- cesses since it determines reaction equilibrium and kinetics. This study investigates the influence of the addition of deep eutectic solvents on the stability and activity of α-chymotrypsin, a proteolytic enzyme with industrial rele- vance. Deep eutectic solvents, composed of choline chloride or betaine mixed with glycerol or sorbitol, were added in the reaction phase at various concentrations. Experimental techniques, including kinetic and fluorometry, were employed to assess the α-chymotrypsin activity, thermal stability, and unfolding reversibility. Atomistic molecular dynamics simulations were also conducted to assess the interactions and provide molecular-level insights between α-chymotrypsin and the solvent. The results showed that among all studied mixtures, adding choline chloride + sorbitol improved thermal stability up to 18 °C and reaction kinetic efficiency up to two-fold upon adding choline chloride + glycerol. Notably, the choline chloride + sorbitol system exhibited the most substantial stabilization effect, attributed to the surface preferential accumulation of sorbitol, as corroborated by the computational anal- yses. This work highlights the potential of tailoring liquid reaction phase of α-chymotrypsin catalyzed reaction using neoteric solvents to enhance α-chymotrypsin performance and stability in industrial applications.
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The Rho GTPase (Ras homolog GTPases) system is a crucial signal transducer that regulates various cellular processes, including cell cycle and migration, genetic transcription, and apoptosis. In this study, we investigated the unfolded state of the first FF domain (FF1) of P190A RhoGAP, which features four tandem FF domains. For signal transduction, FF1 is phosphorylated at tyrosine 308 (Y308), which is buried in the hydrophobic core and is inaccessible to kinases in the folded domain. It was proposed, therefore, that the phosphorylation occurs in a transiently populated unfolded state of FF1. To probe the folding pathway of the RhoGAP FF1 domain, here we have performed a nearly complete backbone resonance assignments of a putative partially unfolded state of FF1 in 5 M urea and its fully unfolded state in 8 M urea.
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Resonancia Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular , Dominios Proteicos , Urea , Urea/química , Proteínas Activadoras de GTPasa/química , Proteínas Activadoras de GTPasa/metabolismo , Secuencia de AminoácidosRESUMEN
Fold-switching enables metamorphic proteins to reversibly interconvert between two highly dissimilar native states to regulate their protein functions. While about 100 proteins have been identified to undergo fold-switching, unveiling the key residues behind this mechanism for each protein remains challenging. Reasoning that fold-switching in proteins is driven by dynamic changes in local energetic frustration, we combined fold-switching simulations generated using simplified structure-based models with frustration analysis to identify key residues involved in this process based on the change in the density of minimally frustrated contacts during refolding. Using this approach to analyze the fold-switch of the bacterial transcription factor RfaH, we identified 20 residues that significantly change their frustration during its fold-switch, some of which have been experimentally and computationally reported in previous works. Our approach, which we developed as an additional module for the FrustratometeR package, highlights the role of local frustration dynamics in protein fold-switching and offers a robust tool to enhance our understanding of other proteins with significant conformational shifts.
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Proteínas de Escherichia coli , Pliegue de Proteína , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/química , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Transactivadores/química , Transactivadores/metabolismo , Transactivadores/genética , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Factores de Elongación de Péptidos/química , Factores de Elongación de Péptidos/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Conformación Proteica , TermodinámicaRESUMEN
Function and structure are strongly coupled in obligated oligomers such as Triosephosphate isomerase (TIM). In animals and fungi, TIM monomers are inactive and unstable. Previously, we used ancestral sequence reconstruction to study TIM evolution and found that before these lineages diverged, the last opisthokonta common ancestor of TIM (LOCATIM) was an obligated oligomer that resembles those of extant TIMs. Notably, calorimetric evidence indicated that ancestral TIM monomers are more structured than extant ones. To further increase confidence about the function, structure, and stability of the LOCATIM, in this work, we applied two different inference methodologies and the worst plausible case scenario for both of them, to infer four sequences of this ancestor and test the robustness of their physicochemical properties. The extensive biophysical characterization of the four reconstructed sequences of LOCATIM showed very similar hydrodynamic and spectroscopic properties, as well as ligand-binding energetics and catalytic parameters. Their 3D structures were also conserved. Although differences were observed in melting temperature, all LOCATIMs showed reversible urea-induced unfolding transitions, and for those that reached equilibrium, high conformational stability was estimated (ΔGTot = 40.6-46.2 kcal/mol). The stability of the inactive monomeric intermediates was also high (ΔGunf = 12.6-18.4 kcal/mol), resembling some protozoan TIMs rather than the unstable monomer observed in extant opisthokonts. A comparative analysis of the 3D structure of ancestral and extant TIMs shows a correlation between the higher stability of the ancestral monomers with the presence of several hydrogen bonds located in the "bottom" part of the barrel.
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Triosa-Fosfato Isomerasa , Triosa-Fosfato Isomerasa/química , Triosa-Fosfato Isomerasa/genética , Triosa-Fosfato Isomerasa/metabolismo , Animales , Evolución Molecular , Multimerización de Proteína , Modelos Moleculares , Estabilidad de EnzimasRESUMEN
Although unfolded protein response (UPR) is essential for cellular protection, its prolonged activation may induce apoptosis, compromising cellular longevity. The aging process increases the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in skeletal muscle. However, whether combined exercise can prevent age-induced ER stress in skeletal muscle remains unknown. Evidence suggests that ER stress may increase inflammation by counteracting the positive effects of interleukin-10 (IL-10), whereas its administration in cells inhibits ER stress and apoptosis. This study verified the effects of aging and combined exercise on physical performance, ER stress markers, and inflammation in the quadriceps of mice. Moreover, we verified the effects of IL-10 on ER stress markers. C57BL/6 mice were distributed into young (Y, 6 mo old), old sedentary (OS, sedentary, 24 mo old), and old trained group (OT, submitted to short-term combined exercise, 24 mo old). To clarify the role of IL-10 in UPR pathways, knockout mice lacking IL-10 were used. The OS mice presented worse physical performance and higher ER stress-related proteins, such as C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP) and phospho-eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 alpha (p-eIF2α/eIF2α). The exercise protocol increased muscle strength and IL-10 protein levels in OT while inducing the downregulation of CHOP protein levels compared with OS. Furthermore, mice lacking IL-10 increased BiP, CHOP, and p-eIF2α/eIF2α protein levels, indicating this cytokine can regulate the ER stress response in skeletal muscle. Bioinformatics analysis showed that endurance and resistance training downregulated DNA damage inducible transcript 3 (DDIT3) and XBP1 gene expression in the vastus lateralis of older people, reinforcing our findings. Thus, combined exercise is a potential therapeutic intervention for promoting adjustments in ER stress markers in aged skeletal muscle.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Aging elevates endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in skeletal muscle, potentially heightening inflammation by opposing interleukin-10 (IL-10) effects. This study found that short-term combined exercise boosted strength and IL-10 protein levels while reducing CHOP protein levels in older mice. In addition, IL-10-deficient mice exhibited increased ER stress markers, highlighting IL-10's role in regulating ER stress in skeletal muscle. Consequently, combined exercise emerges as a therapeutic intervention to elevate IL-10 and adjust ER stress markers in aging.
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Envejecimiento , Estrés del Retículo Endoplásmico , Interleucina-10 , Músculo Esquelético , Condicionamiento Físico Animal , Animales , Masculino , Ratones , Envejecimiento/metabolismo , Envejecimiento/fisiología , Estrés del Retículo Endoplásmico/fisiología , Inflamación/metabolismo , Interleucina-10/metabolismo , Interleucina-10/genética , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Ratones Noqueados , Músculo Esquelético/metabolismo , Condicionamiento Físico Animal/fisiología , Músculo Cuádriceps/metabolismo , Respuesta de Proteína Desplegada/fisiologíaRESUMEN
Protein folding and evolution are intimately linked phenomena. Here, we revisit the concept of exons as potential protein folding modules across a set of 38 abundant and conserved protein families. Taking advantage of genomic exon-intron organization and extensive protein sequence data, we explore exon boundary conservation and assess the foldon-like behavior of exons using energy landscape theoretic measurements. We found deviations in the exon size distribution from exponential decay indicating selection in evolution. We show that when taken together there is a pronounced tendency to independent foldability for segments corresponding to the more conserved exons, supporting the idea of exon-foldon correspondence. While 45% of the families follow this general trend when analyzed individually, there are some families for which other stronger functional determinants, such as preserving frustrated active sites, may be acting. We further develop a systematic partitioning of protein domains using exon boundary hotspots, showing that minimal common exons correspond with uninterrupted alpha and/or beta elements for the majority of the families but not for all of them.
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Exones , Pliegue de Proteína , Exones/genética , Humanos , Proteínas/genética , Proteínas/química , Evolución Molecular , Intrones/genéticaRESUMEN
Antivenoms are essential in the treatment of the neurotoxicity caused by elapid snakebites. However, there are elapid neurotoxins, e.g., long-chain α-neurotoxins (also known as long-chain three-finger toxins) that are barely neutralized by commercial elapid antivenoms; so, recombinant elapid neurotoxins could be an alternative or complements for improving antibody production against the lethal long-chain α-neurotoxins from elapid venoms. This work communicates the expression of a recombinant long-chain α-neurotoxin, named HisrLcNTx or rLcNTx, which based on the most lethal long-chain α-neurotoxins reported, was constructed de novo. The gene of rLcNTx was synthesized and introduced into the expression vector pQE30, which contains a proteolytic cleavage region for exscinding the mature protein, and His residues in tandem for affinity purification. The cloned pQE30/rLcNTx was transfected into Escherichia coli Origami cells to express rLcNTx. After expression, it was found in inclusion bodies, and folded in multiple Cys-Cys structural isoforms. To observe the capability of those isoforms to generate antibodies against native long-chain α-neurotoxins, groups of rabbits were immunized with different cocktails of Cys-Cys rLcNTx isoforms. In vitro, and in vivo analyses revealed that rabbit antibodies raised against different rLcNTx Cys-Cys isoforms were able to recognize pure native long-chain α-neurotoxins and their elapid venoms, but they were unable to neutralize bungarotoxin, a classical long-chain α-neurotoxin, and other elapid venoms. The rLcNTx Cys-Cys isoform 2 was the immunogen that produced the best neutralizing antibodies in rabbits. Yet to neutralize the elapid venoms from the black mamba Dendroaspis polylepis, and the coral shield cobra Aspidelaps lubricus, it was required to use two types of antibodies, the ones produced using rLcNTx Cys-Cys isoform 2 and antibodies produced using short-chain α-neurotoxins. Expression of recombinant elapid neurotoxins as immunogens could be an alternative to improve elapid antivenoms; nevertheless, recombinant elapid neurotoxins must be well-folded to be used as immunogens for obtaining neutralizing antibodies.
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Antivenenos , Venenos Elapídicos , Neurotoxinas , Pliegue de Proteína , Proteínas Recombinantes , Animales , Proteínas Recombinantes/inmunología , Proteínas Recombinantes/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes/química , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Venenos Elapídicos/inmunología , Venenos Elapídicos/genética , Venenos Elapídicos/química , Antivenenos/inmunología , Antivenenos/química , Neurotoxinas/inmunología , Neurotoxinas/genética , Neurotoxinas/química , Anticuerpos Neutralizantes/inmunología , Conejos , Secuencia de AminoácidosRESUMEN
Proteins have evolved through mutations-amino acid substitutions-since life appeared on Earth, some 109 years ago. The study of these phenomena has been of particular significance because of their impact on protein stability, function, and structure. This study offers a new viewpoint on how the most recent findings in these areas can be used to explore the impact of mutations on protein sequence, stability, and evolvability. Preliminary results indicate that: (1) mutations can be viewed as sensitive probes to identify 'typos' in the amino-acid sequence, and also to assess the resistance of naturally occurring proteins to unwanted sequence alterations; (2) the presence of 'typos' in the amino acid sequence, rather than being an evolutionary obstacle, could promote faster evolvability and, in turn, increase the likelihood of higher protein stability; (3) the mutation site is far more important than the substituted amino acid in terms of the marginal stability changes of the protein, and (4) the unpredictability of protein evolution at the molecular level-by mutations-exists even in the absence of epistasis effects. Finally, the Darwinian concept of evolution "descent with modification" and experimental evidence endorse one of the results of this study, which suggests that some regions of any protein sequence are susceptible to mutations while others are not. This work contributes to our general understanding of protein responses to mutations and may spur significant progress in our efforts to develop methods to accurately forecast changes in protein stability, their propensity for metamorphism, and their ability to evolve.
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Evolución Molecular , Mutación , Estabilidad Proteica , Proteínas , Proteínas/genética , Proteínas/química , Proteínas/metabolismo , Secuencia de AminoácidosRESUMEN
Assessing membrane protein stability is among the major challenges in protein science due to their inherent complexity, which complicates the application of conventional biophysical tools. In this work, sodium dodecyl sulfate-induced denaturation of AfCopA, a Cu(I)-transport ATPase from Archaeoglobus fulgidus, was explored using a combined model-free spectral phasor analysis and a model-dependent thermodynamic analysis. Decrease in tryptophan and 1-anilino-naphthalene-8-sulfonate fluorescence intensity, displacements in the spectral phasor space, and the loss of ATPase activity were reversibly induced by this detergent. Refolding from the SDS-induced denatured state yields an active enzyme that is functionally and spectroscopically indistinguishable from the native state of the protein. Phasor analysis of Trp spectra allowed us to identify two intermediate states in the SDS-induced denaturation of AfCopA, a result further supported by principal component analysis. In contrast, traditional thermodynamic analysis detected only one intermediate state, and including the second one led to overparameterization. Additionally, ANS fluorescence spectral analysis detected one more intermediate and a gradual change at the level of the hydrophobic transmembrane surface of the protein. Based on this evidence, a model for acquiring the native structure of AfCopA in a membrane-like environment is proposed.
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Archaeoglobus fulgidus , Proteínas de la Membrana , Desnaturalización Proteica , Dodecil Sulfato de Sodio , Termodinámica , Dodecil Sulfato de Sodio/química , Dodecil Sulfato de Sodio/farmacología , Archaeoglobus fulgidus/enzimología , Proteínas de la Membrana/química , Proteínas de la Membrana/metabolismo , Adenosina Trifosfatasas/química , Adenosina Trifosfatasas/metabolismo , Espectrometría de Fluorescencia , Estabilidad Proteica , Proteínas Arqueales/química , Proteínas Arqueales/metabolismo , Naftalenosulfonatos de Anilina/química , Naftalenosulfonatos de Anilina/metabolismo , Triptófano/química , Triptófano/metabolismo , Cobre/química , Cobre/metabolismo , Pliegue de Proteína , Conformación ProteicaRESUMEN
We propose that spontaneous folding and molecular evolution of biopolymers are two universal aspects that must concur for life to happen. These aspects are fundamentally related to the chemical composition of biopolymers and crucially depend on the solvent in which they are embedded. We show that molecular information theory and energy landscape theory allow us to explore the limits that solvents impose on biopolymer existence. We consider 54 solvents, including water, alcohols, hydrocarbons, halogenated solvents, aromatic solvents, and low molecular weight substances made up of elements abundant in the universe, which may potentially take part in alternative biochemistries. We find that along with water, there are many solvents for which the liquid regime is compatible with biopolymer folding and evolution. We present a ranking of the solvents in terms of biopolymer compatibility. Many of these solvents have been found in molecular clouds or may be expected to occur in extrasolar planets.
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Solventes , Biopolímeros/química , Solventes/química , Medio Ambiente Extraterrestre/química , Evolución Molecular , Agua/químicaRESUMEN
Niemann-Pick Type C (NPC) represents an autosomal recessive disorder with an incidence rate of 1 in 150,000 live births, classified within lysosomal storage diseases (LSDs). The abnormal accumulation of unesterified cholesterol characterizes the pathophysiology of NPC. This phenomenon is not unique to NPC, as analogous accumulations have also been observed in Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and other neurodegenerative disorders. Interestingly, disturbances in the folding of the mutant protein NPC1 I1061T are accompanied by the aggregation of proteins such as hyperphosphorylated tau, α-synuclein, TDP-43, and ß-amyloid peptide. These accumulations suggest potential disruptions in proteostasis, a regulatory process encompassing four principal mechanisms: synthesis, folding, maintenance of folding, and protein degradation. The dysregulation of these processes leads to excessive accumulation of abnormal proteins that impair cell function and trigger cytotoxicity. This comprehensive review delineates reported alterations across proteostasis mechanisms in NPC, encompassing changes in processes from synthesis to degradation. Additionally, it discusses therapeutic interventions targeting pharmacological facets of proteostasis in NPC. Noteworthy among these interventions is valproic acid, a histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi) that modulates acetylation during NPC1 synthesis. In addition, various therapeutic options addressing protein folding modulation, such as abiraterone acetate, DHBP, calnexin, and arimoclomol, are examined. Additionally, treatments impeding NPC1 degradation, exemplified by bortezomib and MG132, are explored as potential strategies. This review consolidates current knowledge on proteostasis dysregulation in NPC and underscores the therapeutic landscape targeting diverse facets of this intricate process.
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Enfermedades por Almacenamiento Lisosomal , Enfermedad de Niemann-Pick Tipo C , Humanos , Proteostasis , Enfermedad de Niemann-Pick Tipo C/tratamiento farmacológico , Pliegue de Proteína , ProteolisisRESUMEN
Baculoviruses are viral pathogens that infect different species of Lepidoptera, Diptera, and Hymenoptera, with a global distribution. Due to their biological characteristics and the biotechnological applications derived from these entities, the Baculoviridae family is an important subject of study and manipulation in the natural sciences. With the advent of RNA interference mechanisms, the presence of baculoviral genes that do not code for proteins but instead generate transcripts similar to microRNAs (miRNAs) has been described. These miRNAs are functionally associated with the regulation of gene expression, both in viral and host sequences. This article provides a comprehensive review of miRNA biogenesis, function, and characterization in general, with a specific focus on those identified in baculoviruses. Furthermore, it delves into the specific roles of baculoviral miRNAs in regulating viral and host genes and presents structural and thermodynamic stability studies that are useful for detecting shared characteristics with predictive utility. This review aims to expand our understanding of the baculoviral miRNAome, contributing to improvements in the production of baculovirus-based biopesticides, management of resistance phenomena in pests, enhancement of recombinant protein production systems, and development of diverse and improved BacMam vectors to meet biomedical demands.
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MicroARNs , MicroARNs/genética , Baculoviridae/genética , Interferencia de ARN , Agentes de Control Biológico , BiotecnologíaRESUMEN
The discovery of new protein topologies with entanglements and loop-crossings have shown the impact of local amino acid arrangement and global three-dimensional structures. This phenomenon plays a crucial role in understanding how protein structure relates to folding and function, affecting the global stability, and biological activity. Protein entanglements encompassing knots and non-trivial topologies add complexity to their folding free energy landscapes. However, the initial native contacts driving the threading event for entangled proteins remains elusive. The Pierced Lasso Topology (PLT) represents an entangled topology where a covalent linker creates a loop in which the polypeptide backbone is threaded through. Compared to true knotted topologies, PLTs are simpler topologies where the covalent-loop persists in all conformations. In this work, the PLT protein leptin, is used to visualize and differentiate the preference for slipknotting over plugging transition pathways along the folding route. We utilize the Energy Landscape Visualization Method (ELViM), a multidimensional projection technique, to visualize and distinguish early threaded conformations that cannot be observed in an in vitro experiment. Critical contacts for the leptin threading mechanisms were identified where the competing pathways are determined by the formation of a hairpin loop in the unfolded basin. Thus, prohibiting the dominant slipknotting pathway. Furthermore, ELViM offers insights into distinct folding pathways associated with slipknotting and plugging providing a novel tool for de novo design and in vitro experiments with residue specific information of threading events in silico.
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Leptina , Pliegue de Proteína , Modelos Moleculares , Leptina/química , Programas Informáticos , Péptidos , Conformación Proteica , TermodinámicaRESUMEN
J-domain proteins (JDPs) form a very large molecular chaperone family involved in proteostasis processes, such as protein folding, trafficking through membranes and degradation/disaggregation. JDPs are Hsp70 co-chaperones capable of stimulating ATPase activity as well as selecting and presenting client proteins to Hsp70. In mitochondria, human DjC20/HscB (a type III JDP that possesses only the conserved J-domain in some region of the protein) is involved in [FeS] protein biogenesis and assists human mitochondrial Hsp70 (HSPA9). Human DjC20 possesses a zinc-finger domain in its N-terminus, which closely contacts the J-domain and appears to be essential for its function. Here, we investigated the hDjC20 structure in solution as well as the importance of Zn+2 for its stability. The recombinant hDjC20 was pure, folded and capable of stimulating HSPA9 ATPase activity. It behaved as a slightly elongated monomer, as attested by small-angle X-ray scattering and SEC-MALS. The presence of Zn2+ in the hDjC20 samples was verified, a stoichiometry of 1:1 was observed, and its removal by high concentrations of EDTA and DTPA was unfeasible. However, thermal and chemical denaturation in the presence of EDTA led to a reduction in protein stability, suggesting a synergistic action between the chelating agent and denaturators that facilitate protein unfolding depending on metal removal. These data suggest that the affinity of Zn+2 for the protein is very high, evidencing its importance for the hDjC20 structure.
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Proteínas HSP70 de Choque Térmico , Proteínas de Choque Térmico , Humanos , Adenosina Trifosfatasas/metabolismo , Ácido Edético , Proteínas de Choque Térmico/química , Proteínas HSP70 de Choque Térmico/química , Chaperonas Moleculares/químicaRESUMEN
Random energy models (REMs) provide a simple description of the energy landscapes that guide protein folding and evolution. The requirement of a large energy gap between the native structure and unfolded conformations, considered necessary for cooperative, protein-like, folding behavior, indicates that proteins differ markedly from random heteropolymers. It has been suggested, therefore, that natural selection might have acted to choose nonrandom amino acid sequences satisfying this particular condition, implying that a large fraction of possible, unselected random sequences, would not fold to any structure. From an informational perspective, however, this scenario could indicate that protein structures, regarded as messages to be transmitted through a communication channel, would not be efficiently encoded in amino acid sequences, regarded as the communication channel for this transmission, since a large fraction of possible channel states would not be used. Here, we use a combined REM for conformations and sequences, with previously estimated parameters for natural proteins, to explore an alternative possibility in which the appropriate shape of the landscape results mainly from the deviation from randomness of possible native structures instead of sequences. We observe that this situation emerges naturally if the distribution of conformational energies happens to arise from two independent contributions corresponding to sequence-dependent and -independent terms. This construction is consistent with the hypothesis of a protein burial folding code, with native structures being determined by a modest amount of sequence-dependent atomic burial information with sequence-independent constraints imposed by unspecific hydrogen bond formation. More generally, an appropriate combination of sequence-dependent and -independent information accommodates the possibility of an efficient structural encoding with the main physical requirement for folding, providing possible insight not only on the folding process but also on several aspects sequence evolution such as neutral networks, conformational coverage, and de novo gene emergence.
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Pliegue de Proteína , Proteínas , Conformación Proteica , Termodinámica , Modelos Moleculares , Proteínas/genética , Proteínas/químicaRESUMEN
Despite the spectacular success of cutting-edge protein fold prediction methods, many critical questions remain unanswered, including why proteins can reach their native state in a biologically reasonable time. A satisfactory answer to this simple question could shed light on the slowest folding rate of proteins as well as how mutations-amino-acid substitutions and/or post-translational modifications-might affect it. Preliminary results indicate that (i) Anfinsen's dogma validity ensures that proteins reach their native state on a reasonable timescale regardless of their sequence or length, and (ii) it is feasible to determine the evolution of protein folding rates without accounting for epistasis effects or the mutational trajectories between the starting and target sequences. These results have direct implications for evolutionary biology because they lay the groundwork for a better understanding of why, and to what extent, mutations-a crucial element of evolution and a factor influencing it-affect protein evolvability. Furthermore, they may spur significant progress in our efforts to solve crucial structural biology problems, such as how a sequence encodes its folding.
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Metamorphic proteins are a paradigm of the protein folding process, by encoding two or more native states, highly dissimilar in terms of their secondary, tertiary, and even quaternary structure, on a single amino acid sequence. Moreover, these proteins structurally interconvert between these native states in a reversible manner at biologically relevant timescales as a result of different environmental cues. The large-scale rearrangements experienced by these proteins, and their sometimes high mass interacting partners that trigger their metamorphosis, makes the computational and experimental study of their structural interconversion challenging. Here, we present our efforts in studying the refolding landscapes of two quintessential metamorphic proteins, RfaH and KaiB, using simplified dual-basin structure-based models (SBMs), rigorously footed on the energy landscape theory of protein folding and the principle of minimal frustration. By using coarse-grained models in which the native contacts and bonded interactions extracted from the available experimental structures of the two native states of RfaH and KaiB are merged into a single Hamiltonian, dual-basin SBM models can be generated and savvily calibrated to explore their fold-switch in a reversible manner in molecular dynamics simulations. We also describe how some of the insights offered by these simulations have driven the design of experiments and the validation of the conformational ensembles and refolding routes observed using this simple and computationally efficient models.
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Over the past decade, myriads of studies have highlighted the central role of protein condensation in subcellular compartmentalization and spatiotemporal organization of biological processes. Conceptually, protein condensation stands at the highest level in protein structure hierarchy, accounting for the assembly of bodies ranging from thousands to billions of molecules and for densities ranging from dense liquids to solid materials. In size, protein condensates range from nanocondensates of hundreds of nanometers (mesoscopic clusters) to phase-separated micron-sized condensates. In this review, we focus on protein nanocondensation, a process that can occur in subsaturated solutions and can nucleate dense liquid phases, crystals, amorphous aggregates, and fibers. We discuss the nanocondensation of proteins in the light of general physical principles and examine the biophysical properties of several outstanding examples of nanocondensation. We conclude that protein nanocondensation cannot be fully explained by the conceptual framework of micron-scale biomolecular condensation. The evolution of nanocondensates through changes in density and order is currently under intense investigation, and this should lead to the development of a general theoretical framework, capable of encompassing the full range of sizes and densities found in protein condensates.
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A comparative analysis between two problems-apparently unrelated-which are solved in a period of ~400 years, viz., the accurate prediction of both the planetary orbits and the protein structures, leads to inferred conjectures that go far beyond the existence of a common path in their resolution, i.e., observation â pattern recognition â modeling. The preliminary results from this analysis indicate that complementary science, together with a new perspective on protein folding, may help us discover common features that could contribute to a more in-depth understanding of still-unsolved problems such as protein folding.
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Human FoxP proteins share a highly conserved DNA-binding domain that dimerizes via three-dimensional domain swapping, although showing varying oligomerization propensities among its members. Here, we present an experimental and computational characterization of all human FoxP proteins to unravel how their amino acid substitutions impact their folding and dimerization mechanism. We solved the crystal structure of the forkhead domain of FoxP4 to then perform a comparison across all members, finding that their sequence changes impact not only the structural heterogeneity of their forkhead domains but also the protein-protein association energy barrier. Lastly, we demonstrate that the accumulation of a monomeric intermediate is an oligomerization-dependent feature rather than a common aspect of monomers and dimers in this protein subfamily.