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Eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4B is required for efficient cap-dependent translation, it is overexpressed in cancer cells, and may influence stress granule formation. Due to the high degree of intrinsic disorder, eIF4B is rarely observed in cryo-EM structures of translation complexes and only ever by its single structured RNA recognition motif domain, leaving the molecular details of its large intrinsically disordered region (IDR) unknown. By integrating experiments and simulations we demonstrate that eIF4B IDR orchestrates and fine-tunes an intricate transition from monomers to a condensed phase, in which large-size dynamic oligomers form before mesoscopic phase separation. Single-molecule spectroscopy combined with molecular simulations enabled us to characterize the conformational ensembles and underlying intra- and intermolecular dynamics across the oligomerization transition. The observed sensitivity to ionic strength and molecular crowding in the self-association landscape suggests potential regulation of eIF4B nanoscopic and mesoscopic behaviors such as driven by protein modifications, binding partners or changes to the cellular environment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-53136-1 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
July 2025
Department of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, United States.
The dynamic coupling between chromatin organization and biomolecular condensates is governed by chromatin-binding proteins, yet the structural mechanisms by which these proteins modulate nucleosome interactions across spatial and organizational scales remain poorly understood. In this work, using high-resolution sequence-specific coarse-grained models combined with well-tempered metadynamics and parallel tempering, we investigate how heterochromatin protein 1α (HP1α) and a truncated construct of Polyhomeotic-like protein (tPHC3) influence the stability and folding pathways of tetra-nucleosomes, a minimal yet functionally informative chromatin model, under dilute and dense-phase conditions. While these proteins are known to drive distinct nuclear condensates their differential impact on chromatin topology and folding dynamics remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMAbs
December 2025
Department of Chemical, Environmental and Materials Engineering, University of Miami, Miami, FL, USA.
High-concentration monoclonal antibody (mAb) formulations are frequently constrained by elevated viscosity and colloidal instability, stemming from enhanced intermolecular interactions under crowded conditions. In this study, we delineate the thermodynamic and rheological consequences of modulating protein-protein interactions through excipient-mediated and temperature-dependent mechanisms. Using an orthogonal analytical framework comprising diffusion interaction parameter (D) measurements, high-shear rheometry, and Raman spectroscopic profiling, we interrogated mAb solutions at ~ 80 and 160 mg/mL across a physiologically and industrially relevant thermal window (5-45 °C).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
June 2025
Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Denmark, Kemitorvet 206, 2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark.
The hydrogen-bond rearrangements involved in the self-association and microhydration of the simplest vicinal diol, ethylene glycol (EG), have been explored by low-temperature mid- and far-IR cluster spectroscopy in doped neon "quantum" matrices at 4 K complemented by high-level quantum chemical conformational sampling. In addition to the reproduction of previous mid-IR jet assignments of the highly concerted hydrogen-bonded O-H stretching transitions, new distinct far-IR observations have been unambiguously attributed to transitions associated with concerted and highly anharmonic large-amplitude hindered OH (OD) torsional motion of (EG)2 and (EG-d2)2, respectively. These observations confirm the formation of a highly S4 symmetric global intermolecular potential energy minimum in the cryogenic neon environment associated with a very compact intermolecular hydrogen-bonded cyclic structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
February 2025
Department of Chemistry, King's College London, Britannia House, 7 Trinity Street, London SE1 1DB, U.K.
Proteins are subject to aging in the form of spontaneous, nonenzymatic post-translational modifications (PTMs). One such PTM is the formation of the β-linked isomer l-isoaspartic acid (isoAsp) from aspartic acid (Asp) or asparagine residues, which tends to occur in long-lived proteins. Histones can exhibit half-lives on the order of 100 days, and unsurprisingly, isoAsp formation has been observed in nearly every histone family.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem Lett
November 2024
Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China.
It is a common belief that the negative heat capacity change (Δ) associated with protein folding, which is a manifestation of the hydrophobic effect, results from a decrease in the solvent accessible hydrophobic surface area. Herein, we investigate the conformational energy landscape and dynamics of a tetrapeptide composed of two glycine and two 4-cyanotryptophan residues using time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, molecular dynamics simulations, and density functional theory calculations and find that, contrary to this expectation, the hydrophobic association of two 4-cyanotryptophan side chains leads to a positive Δ (approximately 543 J K mol). Furthermore, we find that promoting one of the 4-cyanotryptophans to its excited electronic state strengthens this self-association.
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