4.8 Article

In-Cell Protein-Protein Contacts: Transient Interactions in the Crowd

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS
Volume 10, Issue 18, Pages 5667-5673

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b01556

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 GM116961]
  2. Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
  3. NSF [MCB 1803786]

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Proteins in vivo are immersed in a crowded environment of water, ions, metabolites, and macromolecules. In-cell experiments highlight how transient weak protein-protein interactions promote (via functional quinary structure) or hinder (via competitive binding or sticking) complex formation. Computational models of the cytoplasm are expensive. We tackle this challenge with an all-atom model of a small volume of the E. coli cytoplasm to simulate protein-protein contacts up to the 5 mu s time scale on the special-purpose supercomputer Anton 2. We use three CHARMM-derived force fields: C22*, C36m, and C36mCU (with CUFIX corrections). We find that both C36m and C36mCU form smaller contact surfaces than C22*. Although CUFIX was developed to reduce protein-protein sticking, larger contacts are observed with C36mCU than C36m. We show that the lifespan Delta t of protein-protein contacts obeys a power law distribution between 0.03 and 3 mu s, with similar to 90% of all contacts lasting <1 mu s (similar to the time scale for downhill folding).

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