Protein Dynamics Flashcards

1
Q

Intrinsically disordered proteins

A
  • Lack definable structure (no well-defined conformations in their
    structural ensemble)
  • Often lack a hydrophobic core
  • Have high densities of charged residues (Lys, Arg, Glu) and Pro
  • Are not misfolded!
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2
Q

Stokes radius

A
  • The Stokes radius or hydrodynamic
    radius (Rh) - corresponding radius of a
    hard sphere that diffuses at the same
    rate as the protein
  • In IDPs, measured values are averages
    over a large number of individual
    conformations that may differ
    substantially in size and shape
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3
Q

Intrinsic disorder determinants

A
  • Display both low hydrophobicity and high net charge, both of which
    prevent hydrophobic collapse

Two classes:
* Random coil (extended) states with high stokes radii
* More compact “pre-molten globules” that display stokes radii
between the canonical “molten globule” and purely extended
states

  • Percentage of charged amino acids divided by the percentage of
    hydrophobic amino acids => higher values = random coil
  • More than 25% of eukaryotic proteins are mostly disordered and more
    than 50% possess IDRs => unstructural biology
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4
Q

Hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass
spectrometry (HDX-MS)

A

Monitor dynamics and conformational changes of a protein under native
conditions in solution

  • Applications:
    • Study small proteins, large, complex assemblies, and intrinsically
      disordered proteins
    • Analyze structure
    • Assess conformational changes during catalytic function
    • Pinpoint binding surfaces
  • Involves putting your protein of interest into a solution of D 2 O and monitoring
    incorporation of deuterium into the protein over time
    Hodge et al, 2019, Protein Science

MECH:
1. Transitions are monitored under equilibrium conditions during
continuous labeling HDX-MS experiments.
2. A protein is diluted into a deuterated solution for various amounts of
time, ranging from seconds to hours or days.
3. The exchange reaction is then quenched by dropping the solution pH to
2.5 and 0° C, where the labeling rate is at its minimum.
4. Labeled protein is digested into peptide fragments that are separated
and analyzed by liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry
(LCMS).
5. LC separation must be performed quickly and under quench conditions
to limit back exchange of the deuterium label with water in solution.

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