Crowding-Regulated Binding of Divalent Biomolecules

Tomasz Skóra, Mathijs Janssen, Andreas Carlson, and Svyatoslav Kondrat
Phys. Rev. Lett. 130, 258401 – Published 22 June 2023
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Abstract

Macromolecular crowding affects biophysical processes as diverse as diffusion, gene expression, cell growth, and senescence. Yet, there is no comprehensive understanding of how crowding affects reactions, particularly multivalent binding. Herein, we use scaled particle theory and develop a molecular simulation method to investigate the binding of monovalent to divalent biomolecules. We find that crowding can increase or reduce cooperativity—the extent to which the binding of a second molecule is enhanced after binding a first molecule—by orders of magnitude, depending on the sizes of the involved molecular complexes. Cooperativity generally increases when a divalent molecule swells and then shrinks upon binding two ligands. Our calculations also reveal that, in some cases, crowding enables binding that does not occur otherwise. As an immunological example, we consider immunoglobulin G-antigen binding and show that crowding enhances its cooperativity in bulk but reduces it when an immunoglobulin G binds antigens on a surface.

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  • Received 6 November 2022
  • Accepted 8 May 2023

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.258401

© 2023 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Physics of Living SystemsInterdisciplinary PhysicsStatistical Physics & Thermodynamics

Authors & Affiliations

Tomasz Skóra1,2, Mathijs Janssen3,4,5, Andreas Carlson3, and Svyatoslav Kondrat1,6

  • 1Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, 01-224 Warsaw, Poland
  • 2Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA
  • 3Department of Mathematics, Mechanics Division, University of Oslo, N-0851 Oslo, Norway
  • 4Centre for Cancer Cell Reprogramming, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Montebello, N-0379 Oslo, Norway
  • 5Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Faculty of Science and Technology, Pb 5003, 1433 Ås, Norway
  • 6Institute for Computational Physics, University of Stuttgart, Stuttgart 70569, Germany

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Issue

Vol. 130, Iss. 25 — 23 June 2023

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