학술논문

One Crystal, Two Temperatures: Cryocooling Penalties Alter Ligand Binding to Transient Protein Sites
Document Type
article
Source
ChemBioChem. 16(11)
Subject
Organic Chemistry
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Benzimidazoles
Cytochrome-c Peroxidase
Apoproteins
Ligands
Crystallography
X-Ray
Binding Sites
Protein Conformation
Protein Binding
Models
Molecular
Cold Temperature
Crystallography
X-Ray
Models
Molecular
Language
Abstract
Interrogating fragment libraries by X-ray crystallography is a powerful strategy for discovering allosteric ligands for protein targets. Cryocooling of crystals should theoretically increase the fraction of occupied binding sites and decrease radiation damage. However, it might also perturb protein conformations that can be accessed at room temperature. Using data from crystals measured consecutively at room temperature and at cryogenic temperature, we found that transient binding sites could be abolished at the cryogenic temperatures employed by standard approaches. Changing the temperature at which the crystallographic data was collected could provide a deliberate perturbation to the equilibrium of protein conformations and help to visualize hidden sites with great potential to allosterically modulate protein function. Too cool to show up: The common practice of cryocooling crystals was found to mask transient protein conformations. Data collected on a single crystal revealed ligand binding to a cryptic site at room temperature that was hidden at cryogenic temperature. These results contradict thermodynamic expectations and provide a method for discovering allosteric sites with great potential for modulating protein (mal)-function.