One of the most intriguing results of single molecule experiments on proteins
and nucleic acids is the discovery of functional heterogeneity: the observation
that complex cellular machines exhibit multiple, biologically active
conformations. The structural differences between these conformations may be
subtle, but each distinct state can be remarkably long-lived, with random
interconversions between states occurring only at macroscopic timescales,
fractions of a second or longer. Though we now have proof of functional
heterogeneity in a handful of systems---enzymes, motors, adhesion
complexes---identifying and measuring it remains a formidable challenge. Here
we show that evidence of this phenomenon is more widespread than previously
known, encoded in data collected from some of the most well-established single
molecule techniques: AFM or optical tweezer pulling experiments. We present a
theoretical procedure for analyzing distributions of rupture/unfolding forces
recorded at different pulling speeds. This results in a single parameter,
quantifying the degree of heterogeneity, and also leads to bounds on the
equilibration and conformational interconversion timescales. Surveying ten
published datasets, we find heterogeneity in five of them, all with
interconversion rates slower than 10 s−1. Moreover, we identify two
systems where additional data at realizable pulling velocities is likely to
find a theoretically predicted, but so far unobserved cross-over regime between
heterogeneous and non-heterogeneous behavior. The significance of this regime
is that it will allow far more precise estimates of the slow conformational
switching times, one of the least understood aspects of functional
heterogeneity.Comment: Main text: 13 pages, 6 figures; SI: 9 pages, 6 figure