Although protein folding and stability have been well explored under simplified conditions in vitro, it is yet unclear how these basic self-organization events are modulated by the crowded interior of live cells. To find out, we use here in-cell NMR to follow at atomic resolution the thermal unfolding of a β-barrel protein inside mammalian and bacterial cells. Challenging the view from in vitro crowding effects, we find that the cells destabilize the protein at 37 °C but with a conspicuous twist: While the melting temperature goes down the cold unfolding moves into the physiological regime, coupled to an augmented heat-capacity change. The effect seems induced by transient, sequence-specific, interactions with the cellular components, actin...
Most knowledge of protein chemistry is derived from experiments performed in dilute, buffered soluti...
ABSTRACT: We used 19F NMR to extend the temperature range accessible to detailed kinetic and equilib...
AbstractBiological cells are extremely sensitive to temperature. What is the mechanism? We compute t...
Although protein folding and stability have been well explored under simplified conditions in vitro,...
Understanding protein thermodynamics as it occurs inside cells is a fundamental goal of biophysics, ...
Advances in the study of protein folding and structure have greatly expanded our understanding and a...
Most biochemical reactions have evolved in crowded intracellular environments. However, the complexi...
Proteins are crucial for all cellular life. Every signal received by a cell, and every response to i...
An understanding of cellular chemistry requires knowledge of how crowded environments affect protein...
Proteins function in a sea of macromolecules within cells, but are traditionally studied under ideal...
Protein folding and unfolding are crucial for a range of biological phenomena and human diseases. De...
The intracellular milieu is filled with small molecules, nucleic acids, lipids and proteins. Theorie...
Protein folding landscapes and protein-protein interaction landscapes are subject to modulation by m...
The transient unfolding events from the native state of a protein towards higher energy states can b...
Despite several careful experimental analyses, it is not yet clear whether protein cold-denaturation...
Most knowledge of protein chemistry is derived from experiments performed in dilute, buffered soluti...
ABSTRACT: We used 19F NMR to extend the temperature range accessible to detailed kinetic and equilib...
AbstractBiological cells are extremely sensitive to temperature. What is the mechanism? We compute t...
Although protein folding and stability have been well explored under simplified conditions in vitro,...
Understanding protein thermodynamics as it occurs inside cells is a fundamental goal of biophysics, ...
Advances in the study of protein folding and structure have greatly expanded our understanding and a...
Most biochemical reactions have evolved in crowded intracellular environments. However, the complexi...
Proteins are crucial for all cellular life. Every signal received by a cell, and every response to i...
An understanding of cellular chemistry requires knowledge of how crowded environments affect protein...
Proteins function in a sea of macromolecules within cells, but are traditionally studied under ideal...
Protein folding and unfolding are crucial for a range of biological phenomena and human diseases. De...
The intracellular milieu is filled with small molecules, nucleic acids, lipids and proteins. Theorie...
Protein folding landscapes and protein-protein interaction landscapes are subject to modulation by m...
The transient unfolding events from the native state of a protein towards higher energy states can b...
Despite several careful experimental analyses, it is not yet clear whether protein cold-denaturation...
Most knowledge of protein chemistry is derived from experiments performed in dilute, buffered soluti...
ABSTRACT: We used 19F NMR to extend the temperature range accessible to detailed kinetic and equilib...
AbstractBiological cells are extremely sensitive to temperature. What is the mechanism? We compute t...