Publication | Open Access
Effect of protein–protein interactions and solvent viscosity on the rotational diffusion of proteins in crowded environments
51
Citations
30
References
2018
Year
Protein ChemistryProtein–protein InteractionsBiophysical ModelingBiochemistryProtein Crowder MoleculesProtein FoldingSolvent ViscosityRotational DiffusionCrowded EnvironmentsCluster FormationBiophysical AspectRheologyProtein Phase SeparationMedicineBiophysicsComputational Biophysics
The rotational diffusion of a protein in the presence of protein crowder molecules was analyzed via computer simulations. Cluster formation as a result of transient intermolecular contacts was identified as the dominant effect for reduced rotational diffusion upon crowding. The slow-down in diffusion was primarily correlated with direct protein-protein contacts rather than indirect interactions via shared hydration layers. But increased solvent viscosity due to crowding contributed to a lesser extent. Key protein-protein contacts correlated with a slow-down in diffusion involve largely interactions between charged and polar groups suggesting that the surface composition of a given protein and the resulting propensity for forming interactions with surrounding proteins in a crowded cellular environment may be the major determinant of its diffusive properties.
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