AI Article Synopsis

  • Proteins from extremophiles are useful for studying how non-covalent interactions affect protein stability and could be used to create strong biomaterials.
  • Research focuses on comparing the cold shock proteins BsCSP and TmCSP, revealing that TmCSP is mechanically stronger but softer in its native state compared to BsCSP, partly due to a larger number of salt bridges.
  • A charged triple mutant of BsCSP, altered to include ionic clusters from TmCSP, shows improved stability and softness, suggesting that such design features could be used in engineering other proteins.

Article Abstract

Proteins from extremophilic organisms provide excellent model systems to determine the role of non-covalent interactions in defining protein stability and dynamics as well as being attractive targets for the development of robust biomaterials. Hyperthermophilic proteins have a prevalence of salt bridges, relative to their mesophilic homologues, which are thought to be important for enhanced thermal stability. However, the impact of salt bridges on the mechanical properties of proteins is far from understood. Here, a combination of protein engineering, biophysical characterisation, single molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS) and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations directly investigates the role of salt bridges in the mechanical stability of two cold shock proteins; BsCSP from the mesophilic organism Bacillus subtilis and TmCSP from the hyperthermophilic organism Thermotoga maritima. Single molecule force spectroscopy shows that at ambient temperatures TmCSP is mechanically stronger yet, counter-intuitively, its native state can withstand greater deformation before unfolding (i.e. it is mechanically soft) compared with BsCSP. MD simulations were used to identify the location and quantify the population of salt bridges, and reveal that TmCSP contains a larger number of highly occupied salt bridges than BsCSP. To test the hypothesis that salt-bridges endow these mechanical properties on the hyperthermophilic CSP, a charged triple mutant (CTM) variant of BsCSP was generated by grafting an ionic cluster from TmCSP into the BsCSP scaffold. As expected CTM is thermodynamically more stable and mechanically softer than BsCSP. We show that a grafted ionic cluster can increase the mechanical softness of a protein and speculate that it could provide a mechanical recovery mechanism and that it may be a design feature applicable to other proteins.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c5sm02938dDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

salt bridges
20
ionic cluster
12
bridges mechanical
8
mechanical properties
8
single molecule
8
molecule force
8
force spectroscopy
8
bscsp
6
proteins
5
salt
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!