TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding Supramolecular Assembly of Supercharged Proteins
AU - Jacobs, Michael I.
AU - Bansal, Prateek
AU - Shukla, Diwakar
AU - Schroeder, Charles M.
N1 - This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences under Award No. DE-SC0022035. M.I.J. acknowledges a Beckman Institute Postdoctoral Fellowship and a Mistletoe Fellowship. D.S. and P.D.B. acknowledge support from NSF MCB-1845606. We thank Prof. Andrew Ellington for providing plasmids encoding for GFP-11, GFP-17, GFP-32, and Ceru+32o, and we thank Prof. Catherine Murphy for use of the Malvern Zetasizer Nano ZS. P.D.B. thanks Balaji Selvam, Soumajit Dutta, and Jiming Chen for useful discussions and The Blue Waters Petascale Computing Facility and National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), which are supported by the National Science Foundation (awards OCI-0725070 and ACI-1238993) and the state of Illinois.
PY - 2022/9/28
Y1 - 2022/9/28
N2 - Ordered supramolecular assemblies have recently been created using electrostatic interactions between oppositely charged proteins. Despite recent progress, the fundamental mechanisms governing the assembly of oppositely supercharged proteins are not fully understood. Here, we use a combination of experiments and computational modeling to systematically study the supramolecular assembly process for a series of oppositely supercharged green fluorescent protein variants. We show that net charge is a sufficient molecular descriptor to predict the interaction fate of oppositely charged proteins under a given set of solution conditions (e.g., ionic strength), but the assembled supramolecular structures critically depend on surface charge distributions. Interestingly, our results show that a large excess of charge is necessary to nucleate assembly and that charged residues not directly involved in interprotein interactions contribute to a substantial fraction (∼30%) of the interaction energy between oppositely charged proteins via long-range electrostatic interactions. Dynamic subunit exchange experiments further show that relatively small, 16-subunit assemblies of oppositely charged proteins have kinetic lifetimes on the order of ∼10-40 min, which is governed by protein composition and solution conditions. Broadly, our results inform how protein supercharging can be used to create different ordered supramolecular assemblies from a single parent protein building block.
AB - Ordered supramolecular assemblies have recently been created using electrostatic interactions between oppositely charged proteins. Despite recent progress, the fundamental mechanisms governing the assembly of oppositely supercharged proteins are not fully understood. Here, we use a combination of experiments and computational modeling to systematically study the supramolecular assembly process for a series of oppositely supercharged green fluorescent protein variants. We show that net charge is a sufficient molecular descriptor to predict the interaction fate of oppositely charged proteins under a given set of solution conditions (e.g., ionic strength), but the assembled supramolecular structures critically depend on surface charge distributions. Interestingly, our results show that a large excess of charge is necessary to nucleate assembly and that charged residues not directly involved in interprotein interactions contribute to a substantial fraction (∼30%) of the interaction energy between oppositely charged proteins via long-range electrostatic interactions. Dynamic subunit exchange experiments further show that relatively small, 16-subunit assemblies of oppositely charged proteins have kinetic lifetimes on the order of ∼10-40 min, which is governed by protein composition and solution conditions. Broadly, our results inform how protein supercharging can be used to create different ordered supramolecular assemblies from a single parent protein building block.
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U2 - 10.1021/acscentsci.2c00730
DO - 10.1021/acscentsci.2c00730
M3 - Article
C2 - 36188338
AN - SCOPUS:85138825351
SN - 2374-7943
VL - 8
SP - 1350
EP - 1361
JO - ACS Central Science
JF - ACS Central Science
IS - 9
ER -