Towards designing tunable nano-machines: Taking advantage of protein disorder
Implementing Organization
Indian Institute of Technology (IIT)
Principal Investigator
Dr. Athi Narayanan Naganathan
Assistant Professor
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Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Madras
About
How are evolutionary selected functional and conformational features
imprinted on the sequence, and how does Nature introduce multi-functionality
into proteins through minimal changes in primary sequence? Is functional
promiscuity compromised in going from a disordered domain to a well-folded
structure? Can a quantitative picture of the interplay between energetic
frustration, folding speed, stability and functional constraints be detailed at
the amino-acid level on homologous proteins? How can these structural energetic subtleties at both local and global level be interwoven to design
protein-based nano-sensors?
We plan to answer these questions by studying homologous proteins that
display extremes of disorder tendency and promiscuity – one completely
unstructured, promiscuous and exhibiting weak DNA-binding (CytR) and the
other well-folded, displaying specific and strong DNA-binding (LacR). CytR
folds upon binding DNA to a structure resembling LacR.We therefore plan to
construct a mutational path from the disordered CytR to the ordered LacR
through rational protein design, extensive ensemble spectroscopic
characterization, and DNA-binding assays. The connection between
patterning of amino-acids, structure and functional promiscuity gleaned from
this approach would then be exploited (together with a simple model) to
design protein-based versatile sensors that can rapidly detect minor changes
in ambient conditions and report them via reliable spectral signatures.