Now showing 1 - 7 of 7
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Protein plasticity driven by disorder and collapse governs the heterogeneous binding of CytR to DNA

04-05-2018, Munshi, Sneha, Gopi, Soundhararajan, Subramanian, Sandhyaa, Campos, Luis A., Naganathan, Athi N.

The amplitude of thermodynamic fluctuations in biological macromolecules determines their conformational behavior, dimensions, nature of phase transitions and effectively their specificity and affinity, thus contributing to fine-tuned molecular recognition. Unique among large-scale conformational changes in proteins are temperature-induced collapse transitions in intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs). Here, we show that CytR DNA-binding domain, an IDP that folds on binding DNA, undergoes a coil-to-globule transition with temperature in the absence of DNA while exhibiting energetically decoupled local and global structural rearrangements, and maximal thermodynamic fluctuations at the optimal bacterial growth temperature. The collapse is shown to be a continuous transition through a combination of statistical-mechanical modeling and all-atom implicit solvent simulations. Surprisingly, CytR binds single-site cognate DNA with negative cooperativity, described by Hill coefficients less than one, resulting in a graded binding response. We show that heterogeneity arising from varying binding-competent CytR conformations or orientations at the single-molecular level contributes to negative binding cooperativity at the level of bulk measurements due to the conflicting requirements of collapse transition, large fluctuations and folding-upon-binding. Our work reports strong evidence for functionally driven thermodynamic fluctuations in determining the extent of collapse and disorder with implications in protein search efficiency of target DNA sites and regulation.

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Controlling Structure and Dimensions of a Disordered Protein via Mutations

21-01-2020, Munshi, Sneha, Rajendran, Divya, Ramesh, Samyuktha, Subramanian, Sandhyaa, Bhattacharjee, Kabita, Kumar, Meagha Ramana, Naganathan, Athi N.

The dimensions of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are sensitive to small energetic-entropic differences between intramolecular and protein-solvent interactions. This is commonly observed on modulating solvent composition and temperature. However, the inherently heterogeneous conformational landscape of IDPs is also expected to be influenced by mutations that can (de)stabilize pockets of local and even global structure, native and non-native, and hence the average dimensions. Here, we show experimental evidence for the remarkably tunable landscape of IDPs by employing the DNA-binding domain of CytR, a high-sequence-complexity IDP, as a model system. CytR exhibits a range of structure and compactness upon introducing specific mutations that modulate microscopic terms, including main-chain entropy, hydrophobicity, and electrostatics. The degree of secondary structure, as monitored by far-UV circular dichroism (CD), is strongly correlated to average ensemble dimensions for 14 different mutants of CytR and is consistent with the Uversky-Fink relation. Our experiments highlight how average ensemble dimensions can be controlled via mutations even in the disordered regime, the prevalence of non-native interactions and provide testable controls for molecular simulations.

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Entropic Control of an Excited Folded-Like Conformation in a Disordered Protein Ensemble

17-08-2018, Munshi, Sneha, Rajendran, Divya, Naganathan, Athi N.

Many intrinsically disordered proteins switch between unfolded and folded-like forms in the presence of their binding partner. The possibility of a pre-equilibrium between the two macrostates is challenging to discern given the complex conformational landscape. Here, we show that CytR, a disordered DNA-binding domain, samples a folded-like excited state in its native ensemble through equilibrium multi-probe spectroscopy, kinetics and an Ising-like statistical mechanical model. The population of the excited state increases upon stabilization of the native ensemble with an osmolyte, while decreasing with increasing temperatures. A conserved proline residue, the mutation of which weakens the binding affinity to the target promoter, is found to uniquely control the population of the minor excited state. Semi-quantitative statistical mechanical modeling reveals that the conformational diffusion coefficient of disordered CytR is an order of magnitude slower than the estimates from folded domains. The osmolyte and proline mutation smoothen and roughen up the landscape, respectively, apart from modulation of populations. Our work uncovers general strategies to probe for excited structured states in disordered ensembles, and to measure and modulate the roughness of the disordered landscapes, inter-conversion rates of species and their populations.

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Functional regulation of an intrinsically disordered protein via a conformationally excited state

01-06-2023, Madhurima, Kulkarni, Nandi, Bodhisatwa, Munshi, Sneha, Naganathan Athi N., Sekhar, Ashok

A longstanding goal in the field of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) is to characterize their structural heterogeneity and pinpoint the role of this heterogeneity in IDP function. Here, we use multinuclear chemical exchange saturation (CEST) nuclear magnetic resonance to determine the structure of a thermally accessible globally folded excited state in equilibrium with the intrinsically disordered native ensemble of a bacterial transcriptional regulator CytR. We further provide evidence from double resonance CEST experiments that the excited state, which structurally resembles the DNA-bound form of cytidine repressor (CytR), recognizes DNA by means of a “folding-before-binding” conformational selection pathway. The disorder-to-order regulatory switch in DNA recognition by natively disordered CytR therefore operates through a dynamical variant of the lock-and-key mechanism where the structurally complementary conformation is transiently accessed via thermal fluctuations.

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Are protein folding intermediates the evolutionary consequence of functional constraints?

29-01-2015, Naganathan Athi N., Sanchez-Ruiz, Jose M., Munshi, Sneha, Suresh, Swaathiratna

High-resolution experiments on several apparently two-state proteins point to the existence of partially structured excited- or intermediate-states in dynamic equilibrium with native states. Are these intermediate states the byproducts of functional constraints that are by necessity evolutionarily conserved or are they merely the hidden imprints of evolutionary processes? To investigate this, we characterize the folding of Barstar that has a rich history of complex conformational behavior employing a combination of methods-statistical-mechanical model, electrostatic calculations, MD simulations and multiple-sequence alignment-that provide a detailed yet consistent view of its landscape in agreement with experiments. We find that the multistate folding in Barstar is the direct consequence of a strong evolutionary pressure to maintain its binding affinity with Barnase through a large negative electrostatic potential on one face. A single mutation (E76K or E80K) at the binding site is shown to not only enhance the native-state stability but also alter the Barstar folding mechanism to resemble an unfrustrated two-state-like system. Our results argue that though natural proteins are expected to be minimally frustrated, functional constraints can singularly determine the folding mechanism even if it occurs at the expense of frustrated multistate folding. (Graph Presented).

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Imprints of function on the folding landscape: Functional role for an intermediate in a conserved eukaryotic binding protein

28-04-2015, Munshi, Sneha, Naganathan Athi N.

In the computational characterization of single domain protein folding, the effective free energies of numerous microstates are projected onto few collective degrees of freedom that in turn serve as well-defined reaction coordinates. In this regard, one-dimensional (1D) free energy profiles are widely used mainly for their simplicity. Since folding and functional landscapes are interlinked, how well can these reduced representations capture the structural and dynamic features of functional states while being simultaneously consistent with experimental observables? We investigate this issue by characterizing the folding of the four-helix bundle bovine acyl-CoA binding protein (bACBP), which exhibits complex equilibrium and kinetic behaviours, employing an Ising-like statistical mechanical model and molecular simulations. We show that the features of the 1D free energy profile are sufficient to quantitatively reproduce multiple experimental observations including millisecond chevron-like kinetics and temperature dependence, a microsecond fast phase, barrier heights, unfolded state movements, the intermediate structure and average φ-values. Importantly, we find that the structural features of the native-like intermediate (partial disorder in helix 1) are intricately linked to a unique interplay between packing and electrostatics in this domain. By comparison with available experimental data, we propose that this intermediate determines the promiscuous functional behaviour of bACBP that exhibits broad substrate specificity. Our results present evidence to the possibility of employing the statistical mechanical model and the resulting 1D free energy profile to not just understand folding mechanisms but to even extract features of functionally relevant states and their energetic origins.

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Engineering Order and Cooperativity in a Disordered Protein

14-05-2019, Munshi, Sneha, Subramanian, Sandhyaa, Ramesh, Samyuktha, Golla, Hemashree, Kalivarathan, Divakar, Kulkarni, Madhurima, Campos, Luis A., Sekhar, Ashok, Naganathan, Athi N.

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.