4.5 Article

Physical Chemistry of the Protein Backbone: Enabling the Mechanisms of Intrinsic Protein Disorder

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 124, Issue 22, Pages 4379-4390

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c02489

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Robert A. Welch Foundation [H-0013]
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE-1152876, ACI-1548562, OCI-0725070, ACI1238993]
  3. National Institutes of Health [GM-037657]
  4. National Center for Supercomputing Applications Blue Waters Graduate Research Fellowship program

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Over the last two decades it has become clear that well-defined structure is not a requisite for proteins to properly function. Rather, spectra of functionally competent, structurally disordered states have been uncovered requiring canonical paradigms in molecular biology to be revisited or reimagined. It is enticing and oftentimes practical to divide the proteome into structured and unstructured, or disordered, proteins. While function, composition, and structural properties largely differ, these two classes of protein are built upon the same scaffold, namely, the protein backbone. The versatile physicochemical properties of the protein backbone must accommodate structural disorder, order, and transitions between these states. In this review, we survey these properties through the conceptual lenses of solubility and conformational populations and in the context of protein-disorder mediated phenomena (e.g., phase separation, order-disorder transitions, allostery). Particular attention is paid to the results of computational studies, which, through thermodynamic decomposition and dissection of molecular interactions, can provide valuable mechanistic insight and testable hypotheses to guide further solution experiments. Lastly, we discuss changes in the dynamics of side chains and order-disorder transitions of the protein backbone as two modes or realizations of entropic reservoirs capable of tuning coupled thermodynamic processes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available