4.7 Article

Speed limits of protein assembly with reversible membrane localization

期刊

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
卷 154, 期 19, 页码 -

出版社

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0045867

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资金

  1. NIH MIRA Grant [R35GM133644]
  2. NSF XSEDE Stampede2 supercomputer through XRAC [MCB150059]

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This study investigates how proteins exploit the reduced dimensionality of membranes to trigger complex formation, finding that proteins can accelerate dimer formation due to an increase in relative concentration. By identifying major rate-limiting pathways, an excellent approximation for the mean first passage time is derived, highlighting the central role of the sticking rate or effective adsorption coefficient of the membrane in controlling timescales.
Protein assembly is often studied in a three-dimensional solution, but a significant fraction of binding events involve proteins that can reversibly bind and diffuse along a two-dimensional surface. In a recent study, we quantified how proteins can exploit the reduced dimensionality of the membrane to trigger complex formation. Here, we derive a single expression for the characteristic timescale of this multi-step assembly process, where the change in dimensionality renders rates and concentrations effectively time-dependent. We find that proteins can accelerate dimer formation due to an increase in relative concentration, driving more frequent collisions, which often win out over slow-downs due to diffusion. Our model contains two protein populations that dimerize with one another and use a distinct site to bind membrane lipids, creating a complex reaction network. However, by identifying two major rate-limiting pathways to reach an equilibrium steady-state, we derive an excellent approximation for the mean first passage time when lipids are in abundant supply. Our theory highlights how the sticking rate or effective adsorption coefficient of the membrane is central in controlling timescales. We also derive a corrected localization rate to quantify how the geometry of the system and diffusion can reduce rates of membrane localization. We validate and test our results using kinetic and particle-based reaction-diffusion simulations. Our results establish how the speed of key assembly steps can shift by orders-of-magnitude when membrane localization is possible, which is critical to understanding mechanisms used in cells.

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