Issue 14, 2014

The binding mechanisms of intrinsically disordered proteins

Abstract

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) and intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) of proteins are very common and instrumental for cellular signaling. Recently, a number of studies have investigated the kinetic binding mechanisms of IDPs and IDRs. These results allow us to draw conclusions about the energy landscape for the coupled binding and folding of disordered proteins. The association rate constants of IDPs cover a wide range (105–109 M−1 s−1) and are largely governed by long-range charge–charge interactions, similarly to interactions between well-folded proteins. Off-rate constants also differ significantly among IDPs (with half-lives of up to several minutes) but are usually around 0.1–1000 s−1, allowing for rapid dissociation of complexes. Likewise, affinities span from pM to μM suggesting that the low-affinity high-specificity concept for IDPs is not straightforward. Overall, it appears that binding precedes global folding although secondary structure elements such as helices may form before the protein–protein interaction. Short IDPs bind in apparent two-state reactions whereas larger IDPs often display complex multi-step binding reactions. While the two extreme cases of two-step binding (conformational selection and induced fit) or their combination into a square mechanism is an attractive model in theory, it is too simplistic in practice. Experiment and simulation suggest a more complex energy landscape in which IDPs bind targets through a combination of conformational selection before binding (e.g., secondary structure formation) and induced fit after binding (global folding and formation of short-range intermolecular interactions).

Graphical abstract: The binding mechanisms of intrinsically disordered proteins

Additions and corrections

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
07 Oct 2013
Accepted
12 Nov 2013
First published
06 Dec 2013

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2014,16, 6323-6331

The binding mechanisms of intrinsically disordered proteins

J. Dogan, S. Gianni and P. Jemth, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2014, 16, 6323 DOI: 10.1039/C3CP54226B

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