Publications by authors named "M Gruebele"

Hirudin is a bioactive small protein that binds thrombin to interrupt the blood clotting cascade. It contains an ordered and a disordered (IDR) region. Conjugating with polyethylene glycol (PEGylation) is an important modification of biopharmaceuticals to improve their lifetime and retention.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Biomolecular processes such as protein-protein interactions can depend strongly on cell type and even vary within a single cell type. Here we develop a microscope with a Peltier-controlled temperature stage, a laser temperature jump to induce heat stress, and an autofocusing feature to mitigate temperature drift during experiments, to study a protein-protein interaction in a selected cell type within a live organism, the zebrafish larva. As an application of the instrument, we show that there is considerable cell-to-cell variation of the heat shock protein Hsp70 binding to one of its clients, phosphoglycerate kinase in vivo.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Kinetic stability is thought to be an attribute of proteins that require a long lifetime, such as the transporter of thyroxine and holo retinol-binding protein or transthyretin (TTR) functioning in the bloodstream, cerebrospinal fluid, and vitreous humor. TTR evolved from ancestral enzymes known as TTR-related proteins (TRPs). Here, we develop a rate-expansion approach that allows unfolding rates to be measured directly at low denaturant concentration, revealing that kinetic stability exists in the TRP (EcTRP), even though the enzyme structure is more energetically frustrated and has a more mutation-sensitive folding mechanism than human TTR.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nanomaterials acquire a biomolecular corona upon introduction to biological media, leading to biological transformations such as changes in protein function, unmasking of epitopes, and protein fibrilization. Ex vivo studies to investigate the effect of nanoparticles on protein-protein interactions are typically performed in buffer and are rarely measured quantitatively in live cells. Here, we measure the differential effect of silica nanoparticles on protein association in vitro vs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protein-protein and protein-water hydrogen bonding interactions play essential roles in the way a protein passes through the transition state during folding or unfolding, but the large number of these interactions in molecular dynamics (MD) simulations makes them difficult to analyze. Here, we introduce a state space representation and associated "rarity" measure to identify and quantify transition state passage (transit) events. Applying this representation to a long MD simulation trajectory that captured multiple folding and unfolding events of the GTT WW domain, a small protein often used as a model for the folding process, we identified three transition categories: Highway (faster), Meander (slower), and Ambiguous (intermediate).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF