17–18 Jan 2018
Medicon Village
Europe/Stockholm timezone

Dynamics of Proteins in Solution Studied by Quasi-Elastic Neutron Scattering

17 Jan 2018, 15:45
30m
Auditorium (Medicon Village)

Auditorium

Medicon Village

Scheelevägen 2 223 63 Lund Sweden

Speaker

Felix Roosen-Runge (Division of Physical Chemistry, Lund University)

Description

Information on protein dynamics is of central importance for the understanding how biological function is effectuated by individual proteins as well as by well-adjusted interaction cascades within the crowded cytoplasm. Protein dynamics comprises a hierarchy of processes ranging from fluctuations of side chains and the backbone over interdomain motions to self-diffusion of the entire macromolecule and collective and cage diffusion characterizing the structural relaxation in crowded protein solutions. The broad distribution of time scales from pico- to microseconds, and the variety of dynamical processes including simple as well as confined, anomalous diffusion renders investigating protein dynamics a challenging research field. In this context, quasi-elastic neutron scattering (QENS) provides unique information on both the nature of the underlying dynamical process and the related geometry of dynamical confinement. Neutron backscattering (NBS) and neutron spin echo (NSE) spectroscopy have proven particularly relevant for proteins in solutions, as their instrumental time scales around nanoseconds allow to access simultaneously global and internal dynamics. After a brief overview on the key characteristics of QENS techniques, the scientific potential of QENS for protein dynamics will be examplified with two recent case studies. First, the changes of hierarchical protein dynamics upon thermal denaturation have been studied by both real-time monitoring and an additional detailed characterization of selected states [1,2]. Interestingly, while global dynamics are irreversibly arrested after denaturation, local internal dynamics change reversibly, suggesting that localized internal dynamics are mainly affected by basic physicochemical properties. Second, scenarios of dynamical arrest have been examined in solutions of α, β and γ crystallins as model systems for the eye lens with potential implications for the understanding of cataract and presbyopia. While α crystallin solutions behave similar to hard-sphere systems with a repulsive glass transition at high volume fraction, γB crystallin experiences a dramatic slowing down of cage diffusion already at comparably low volume fractions, suggesting an dynamical arrest driven by weak anisotropic attractions [3,4]. [1] M Grimaldo, F Roosen-Runge, et al. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. (2015) 17, 4645-4655 [2] M Hennig, F Roosen-Runge, et al. Soft Matter (2012) 8, 1628-1633 [3] S. Bucciarelli, J.S. Myung, et al. Sci. Adv. (2016) 2, e1601432 [4] S. Bucciarelli, L. Casal-Dujat, et al. J. Phys. Chem. Lett. (2015) 6, 4470–4474

Primary author

Felix Roosen-Runge (Division of Physical Chemistry, Lund University)

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