Abstract

Protein/solvent interactions largely influence protein dynamics, particularly motions in unfolded and intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs). Here, we apply triplet-triplet energy transfer (TTET) to investigate the coupling of internal protein motions to solvent motions by determining the effect of solvent viscosity (η) and macromolecular crowding on the rate constants of loop formation (kc) in several unfolded polypeptide chains including IDPs. The results show that the viscosity dependence of loop formation depends on amino acid sequence, loop length, and co-solute size. Below a critical size (rc), co-solutes exert a maximum effect, indicating that under these conditions microviscosity experienced by chain motions matches macroviscosity of the solvent. rc depends on chain stiffness and reflects the length scale of the chain motions, i.e., it is related to the persistence length. Above rc, the effect of solvent viscosity decreases with increasing co-solute size. For co-solutes typically used to mimic cellular environments, a scaling of kc ∝ η-0.1 is observed, suggesting that dynamics in unfolded proteins are only marginally modulated in cells. The effect of solvent viscosity on kc in the small co-solute limit (below rc) increases with increasing chain length and chain flexibility. Formation of long and very flexible loops exhibits a kc ∝ η-1 viscosity dependence, indicating full solvent coupling. Shorter and less flexible loops show weaker solvent coupling with values as low as kc ∝ η-0.75±0.02. Coupling of formation of short loops to solvent motions is very little affected by amino acid sequence, but solvent coupling of long-range loop formation is decreased by side chain sterics.

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