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Sub-Nanoscale Surface Ruggedness Provides a Water-Tight Seal for Exposed Regions in Soluble Protein Structure

Soluble proteins must maintain backbone hydrogen bonds (BHBs) water-tight to ensure structural integrity. This protection is often achieved by burying the BHBs or wrapping them through intermolecular associations. On the other hand, water has low coordination resilience, with loss of hydrogen-bondin...

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Autores principales: Schulz, Erica, Frechero, Marisa, Appignanesi, Gustavo, Fernández, Ariel
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2941462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20862253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012844
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author Schulz, Erica
Frechero, Marisa
Appignanesi, Gustavo
Fernández, Ariel
author_facet Schulz, Erica
Frechero, Marisa
Appignanesi, Gustavo
Fernández, Ariel
author_sort Schulz, Erica
collection PubMed
description Soluble proteins must maintain backbone hydrogen bonds (BHBs) water-tight to ensure structural integrity. This protection is often achieved by burying the BHBs or wrapping them through intermolecular associations. On the other hand, water has low coordination resilience, with loss of hydrogen-bonding partnerships carrying significant thermodynamic cost. Thus, a core problem in structural biology is whether natural design actually exploits the water coordination stiffness to seal the backbone in regions that are exposed to the solvent. This work explores the molecular design features that make this type of seal operative, focusing on the side-chain arrangements that shield the protein backbone. We show that an efficient sealing is achieved by adapting the sub-nanoscale surface topography to the stringency of water coordination: an exposed BHB may be kept dry if the local concave curvature is small enough to impede formation of the coordination shell of a penetrating water molecule. Examination of an exhaustive database of uncomplexed proteins reveals that exposed BHBs invariably occur within such sub-nanoscale cavities in native folds, while this level of local ruggedness is absent in other regions. By contrast, BHB exposure in misfolded proteins occurs with larger local curvature promoting backbone hydration and consequently, structure disruption. These findings unravel physical constraints fitting a spatially dependent least-action for water coordination, introduce a molecular design concept, and herald the advent of water-tight peptide-based materials with sufficient backbone exposure to remain flexible.
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spelling pubmed-29414622010-09-22 Sub-Nanoscale Surface Ruggedness Provides a Water-Tight Seal for Exposed Regions in Soluble Protein Structure Schulz, Erica Frechero, Marisa Appignanesi, Gustavo Fernández, Ariel PLoS One Research Article Soluble proteins must maintain backbone hydrogen bonds (BHBs) water-tight to ensure structural integrity. This protection is often achieved by burying the BHBs or wrapping them through intermolecular associations. On the other hand, water has low coordination resilience, with loss of hydrogen-bonding partnerships carrying significant thermodynamic cost. Thus, a core problem in structural biology is whether natural design actually exploits the water coordination stiffness to seal the backbone in regions that are exposed to the solvent. This work explores the molecular design features that make this type of seal operative, focusing on the side-chain arrangements that shield the protein backbone. We show that an efficient sealing is achieved by adapting the sub-nanoscale surface topography to the stringency of water coordination: an exposed BHB may be kept dry if the local concave curvature is small enough to impede formation of the coordination shell of a penetrating water molecule. Examination of an exhaustive database of uncomplexed proteins reveals that exposed BHBs invariably occur within such sub-nanoscale cavities in native folds, while this level of local ruggedness is absent in other regions. By contrast, BHB exposure in misfolded proteins occurs with larger local curvature promoting backbone hydration and consequently, structure disruption. These findings unravel physical constraints fitting a spatially dependent least-action for water coordination, introduce a molecular design concept, and herald the advent of water-tight peptide-based materials with sufficient backbone exposure to remain flexible. Public Library of Science 2010-09-17 /pmc/articles/PMC2941462/ /pubmed/20862253 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012844 Text en Schulz et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Schulz, Erica
Frechero, Marisa
Appignanesi, Gustavo
Fernández, Ariel
Sub-Nanoscale Surface Ruggedness Provides a Water-Tight Seal for Exposed Regions in Soluble Protein Structure
title Sub-Nanoscale Surface Ruggedness Provides a Water-Tight Seal for Exposed Regions in Soluble Protein Structure
title_full Sub-Nanoscale Surface Ruggedness Provides a Water-Tight Seal for Exposed Regions in Soluble Protein Structure
title_fullStr Sub-Nanoscale Surface Ruggedness Provides a Water-Tight Seal for Exposed Regions in Soluble Protein Structure
title_full_unstemmed Sub-Nanoscale Surface Ruggedness Provides a Water-Tight Seal for Exposed Regions in Soluble Protein Structure
title_short Sub-Nanoscale Surface Ruggedness Provides a Water-Tight Seal for Exposed Regions in Soluble Protein Structure
title_sort sub-nanoscale surface ruggedness provides a water-tight seal for exposed regions in soluble protein structure
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2941462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20862253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012844
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