Size of the protein-protein energy funnel in crowded environment

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Issue Date
2022-11-08Author
Jenkins, Nathan W.
Kundrotas, Petras J.
Vakser, Ilya A.
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
© 2022 Jenkins, Kundrotas and Vakser. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).
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Association of proteins to a significant extent is determined by their geometric complementarity. Large-scale recognition factors, which directly relate to the funnel-like intermolecular energy landscape, provide important insights into the basic rules of protein recognition. Previously, we showed that simple energy functions and coarse-grained models reveal major characteristics of the energy landscape. As new computational approaches increasingly address structural modeling of a whole cell at the molecular level, it becomes important to account for the crowded environment inside the cell. The crowded environment drastically changes protein recognition properties, and thus significantly alters the underlying energy landscape. In this study, we addressed the effect of crowding on the protein binding funnel, focusing on the size of the funnel. As crowders occupy the funnel volume, they make it less accessible to the ligands. Thus, the funnel size, which can be defined by ligand occupancy, is generally reduced with the increase of the crowders concentration. This study quantifies this reduction for different concentration of crowders and correlates this dependence with the structural details of the interacting proteins. The results provide a better understanding of the rules of protein association in the crowded environment.
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Citation
Jenkins NW, Kundrotas PJ and Vakser IA (2022), Size of the protein-protein energy funnel in crowded environment. Front. Mol. Biosci. 9:1031225. doi: 10.3389/fmolb.2022.1031225
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