Macromolecular
crowding is widely accepted as one of the factors
that can alter protein stability, structure, and function inside cells.
Less often considered is that crowding can be dynamic: as cell volume
changes, either as a result of external duress or in the course of
the cell cycle, water moves in or out through membrane channels, and
crowding changes in tune. Both theory and in vitro experiments predict that protein stability will be altered as a
result of crowding changes. However, it is unclear how much the structural
ensemble is altered as crowding changes in the cell. To test this,
we look at the response of a FRET-labeled kinase to osmotically induced
volume changes in live cells. We examine both the folded and unfolded
states of the kinase by changing the temperature of the media surrounding
the cell. Our data reveals that crowding compacts the structure of
its unfolded ensemble but stabilizes the folded protein. We propose
that the structure of proteins lacking a rigid, well-defined tertiary
structure could be highly sensitive to both increases and decreases
in cell volume. Our findings present a possible mechanism for disordered
proteins to act as sensors and actuators of cell cycle or external
stress events that coincide with a change in macromolecular crowding