In cells, proteins are embedded in a crowded environment that controls their properties via manifold avenues including weak protein–macromolecule interactions. A molecular level understanding of these quinary interactions and their contribution to protein stability, function, and localization in the cell is central to modern structural biology. Using a mutational analysis to quantify the energetic contributions of single amino acids to the stability of the ALS related protein superoxide dismutase I (SOD1) in mammalian cells, we show that quinary interactions destabilize SOD1 by a similar energetic offset for most of the mutants, but there are notable exceptions: Mutants that alter its surface properties can even lead to a stabilization of t...
The vast majority of our current knowledge about the biochemical and biophysical properties of prote...
Proteins are the most important molecules in the cell since they take care of most of the biological...
The vast majority of our current knowledge about the biochemical and biophysical properties of prote...
Globular proteins perform many of the chemical reactions required for life. The prevailing model of ...
Most knowledge of protein chemistry is derived from experiments performed in dilute, buffered soluti...
Most biochemical reactions have evolved in crowded intracellular environments. However, the complexi...
Dynamic nature of structural segments is a key modulator of protein’s intrinsic stability. Mutants o...
There are four well-known levels of protein structure: primary (amino acid sequence), secondary (hel...
Biophysical chemistry deals with the structural behavior, properties and molecular function of biolo...
The marginal stability of globular proteins in the cell is determined by the balance between exclude...
Proteins are crucial for all cellular life. Every signal received by a cell, and every response to i...
This study shows that the diffusive motions of proteins in live cells are by no means without contro...
Biochemical processes inside living cells take place in a confined and highly crowded environment. A...
Backgound:Protein stability appears to be governed by non-covalent interactions. These can be local ...
Neutral and adaptive mutations are key players in the evolutionary dynamics of proteins at molecular...
The vast majority of our current knowledge about the biochemical and biophysical properties of prote...
Proteins are the most important molecules in the cell since they take care of most of the biological...
The vast majority of our current knowledge about the biochemical and biophysical properties of prote...
Globular proteins perform many of the chemical reactions required for life. The prevailing model of ...
Most knowledge of protein chemistry is derived from experiments performed in dilute, buffered soluti...
Most biochemical reactions have evolved in crowded intracellular environments. However, the complexi...
Dynamic nature of structural segments is a key modulator of protein’s intrinsic stability. Mutants o...
There are four well-known levels of protein structure: primary (amino acid sequence), secondary (hel...
Biophysical chemistry deals with the structural behavior, properties and molecular function of biolo...
The marginal stability of globular proteins in the cell is determined by the balance between exclude...
Proteins are crucial for all cellular life. Every signal received by a cell, and every response to i...
This study shows that the diffusive motions of proteins in live cells are by no means without contro...
Biochemical processes inside living cells take place in a confined and highly crowded environment. A...
Backgound:Protein stability appears to be governed by non-covalent interactions. These can be local ...
Neutral and adaptive mutations are key players in the evolutionary dynamics of proteins at molecular...
The vast majority of our current knowledge about the biochemical and biophysical properties of prote...
Proteins are the most important molecules in the cell since they take care of most of the biological...
The vast majority of our current knowledge about the biochemical and biophysical properties of prote...