Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.137, No.16, 5252-5255, 2015
Consequences of Inducing Intrinsic Disorder in a High-Affinity Protein-Protein Interaction
The kinetic and thermodynamic consequences of intrinsic disorder in protein protein recognition are controversial. We address this by induing one partner of the high-affinity colicin E3 rRNase domain-Im3 complex (K-d approximate to 10(-12) M) to become an intrinsically disordered protein (IDP). Through a variety of biophysical measurements, we show that a single alanine mutation at Tyr507 Within the hydrophobic core of the isolated colicin rRNase domain causes the enzyme to become an IDP (E3 rRNase(IDP)). E3 rRNase(IDP) binds stoichiometrically to and forms a structure that is essentially identical to the wild-type complex. However, binding of E3 rRNase(IDP) to Im3 is 4 orders of magnitude weaker than that of the folded rRNase, with thermodynamic parameters reflecting the disorder-to-order transition on forming the complex. Critically, pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of the E3 rRNase(IDP)-Im3 complex demonstrates that the decrease. in affinity is mostly accounted for by a drop in the electrostatically steered association rate. Our study shows that, notwithstanding the advantages intrinsic disorder brings to biological systems, this can come at severe kinetic, and thermodynamic cost.