2 research outputs found
Surface Charge Can Modulate Phase Separation of Multidomain Proteins
Phase separation
has emerged as an important mechanism explaining
the formation of certain biomolecular condensates. Biological phase
separation is often driven by the multivalent interactions of modular
protein domains. Beyond valency, the physical features of folded domains
that promote phase separation are poorly understood. We used a model
systemthe small ubiquitin modifier (SUMO) and its peptide
ligand, the SUMO interaction motif (SIM)to examine how domain
surface charge influences multivalency-driven phase separation. Phase
separation of polySUMO and polySIM was altered by pH via a change
in the protonation state of SUMO surface histidines. These effects
were recapitulated by histidine mutations, which modulated SUMO solubility
and polySUMO–polySIM phase separation in parallel and were
quantitatively explained by atomistic modeling of weak interactions
among proteins in the system. Thus, surface charge can tune the phase
separation of multivalent proteins, suggesting a means of controlling
phase separation biologically, evolutionarily, and therapeutically
Mapping the Hydrogen Bond Networks in the Catalytic Subunit of Protein Kinase A Using H/D Fractionation Factors
Protein kinase A is a prototypical
phosphoryl transferase, sharing
its catalytic core (PKA-C) with the entire kinase family. PKA-C substrate
recognition, active site organization, and product release depend
on the enzyme’s conformational transitions from the open to
the closed state, which regulate its allosteric cooperativity. Here,
we used equilibrium nuclear magnetic resonance hydrogen/deuterium
(H/D) fractionation factors (φ) to probe the changes in the
strength of hydrogen bonds within the kinase upon binding the nucleotide
and a pseudosubstrate peptide (PKI<sub>5–24</sub>). We found
that the φ values decrease upon binding both ligands, suggesting
that the overall hydrogen bond networks in both the small and large
lobes of PKA-C become stronger. However, we observed several important
exceptions, with residues displaying higher φ values upon ligand
binding. Notably, the changes in φ values are not localized
near the ligand binding pockets; rather, they are radiated throughout
the entire enzyme. We conclude that, upon ligand and pseudosubstrate
binding, the hydrogen bond networks undergo extensive reorganization,
revealing that the open-to-closed transitions require global rearrangements
of the internal forces that stabilize the enzyme’s fold