Theory predicts that the net charge (Z) of a protein can be altered by the net charge of a neighboring protein as the two approach one another below the Debye length. This type of charge regulation suggests that a protein's charge and perhaps function might be affected by neighboring proteins without direct binding. Charge regulation during protein crowding has never been directly measured due to analytical challenges. Here, we show that lysine specific protein crosslinkers (NHS ester-Staudinger pairs) can be used to mimic crowding by linking two non-interacting proteins at a maximal distance of $7.9 Å. The net charge of the regioisomeric dimers and preceding monomers can then be determined with lysine-acyl "protein charge ladders" and capillary electrophoresis. As a proof of concept, we covalently linked myoglobin (Z monomer = À0.43 ± 0.01) and α-lactalbumin (Z monomer = À4.63 ± 0.05). Amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange and circular dichroism spectroscopy demonstrated that crosslinking did not significantly alter the structure of either protein or result in direct binding (thus mimicking crowding). Ultimately, capillary electrophoretic analysis of the dimeric charge ladder detected a change in charge of ΔZ = À0.04 ± 0.09 upon crowding by this pair (Z dimer = À5.10 ± 0.07). These small values of ΔZ are not necessarily general to protein crowding (qualitatively or quantitatively) but will vary per protein size, charge, and solvent conditions.
People who are blind do not have access to graphical data and imagery produced by science. This exclusion complicates learning and data sharing between sighted and blind persons. Because blind people use tactile senses to visualize data (and sighted people use eyesight), a single data format that can be easily visualized by both is needed. Here, we report that graphical data can be three-dimensionally printed into tactile graphics that glow with video-like resolution via the lithophane effect. Lithophane forms of gel electropherograms, micrographs, electronic and mass spectra, and textbook illustrations could be interpreted by touch or eyesight at ≥79% accuracy (
n
= 360). The lithophane data format enables universal visualization of data by people regardless of their level of eyesight.
This is the author manuscript accepted for publication and has undergone full peer review but has not been through the copyediting, typesetting, pagination and proofreading process, which may lead to differences between this version and the Version of Record.
The electrostatic effects of protein crowding have not been systematically explored. Rather, protein crowding is generally studied with co-solvents or crowders that are electrostatically neutral, with no methods to measure how the net charge (Z) of a crowder affects protein function. For example, can the activity of an enzyme be affected electrostatically by the net charge of its neighbor in crowded milieu? This paper reports a method for crowding proteins of different net charge to an enzyme via semi-random chemical crosslinking. As a proof of concept, RNase A was crowded (at distances ≤ the Debye length) via crosslinking to different heme proteins with Z = +8.50 ± 0.04, Z = +6.39 ± 0.12, or Z = À10.30 ± 1.32. Crosslinking did not disrupt the structure of proteins, according to amide H/D exchange, and did not inhibit RNase A activity.
This is the author manuscript accepted for publication and has undergone full peer review but has not been through the copyediting, typesetting, pagination and proofreading process, which may lead to differences between this version and the Version of Record.
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