English, Lance R.Tischer, AlexanderDemeler, Aysha K.Demeler, BorriesWhitten, Steven T.2019-08-272019-08-272018-07English, L. R., Tischer, A., Demeler, A. K., Demeler, B., & Whitten, S. T. (2018). Sequence Reversal Prevents Chain Collapse and Yields Heat-Sensitive Intrinsic Disorder. Biophysical Journal, 115(2), pp. 328–340.https://hdl.handle.net/10877/8554Sequence patterns of charge, hydrophobicity, hydrogen bonding, and other amino acid physicochemical properties contribute to mechanisms of protein folding, but how sequence composition and patterns influence the conformational dynamics of the denatured state ensemble is not fully understood. To investigate structure-sequence relationships in the denatured state, we reversed the sequence of staphylococcal nuclease and characterized its structure, thermodynamic character, and hydrodynamic radius using circular dichroism spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering, analytical ultracentrifugation, and size-exclusion chromatography as a function of temperature. The macromolecular size of "Retro-nuclease" is highly expanded in solution with characteristics similar to biological intrinsically disordered proteins. In contradistinction to a disordered state, Retro-nuclease exhibits a broad sigmoid transition of its hydrodynamic dimensions as temperature is increased, indicating a thermodynamically controlled compaction. Counterintuitively, the magnitude of these temperature-induced hydrodynamic changes exceed that observed from thermal denaturation of folded unaltered staphylococcal nuclease. Undetectable by calorimetry and intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence, the lack of heat capacity or fluorescence changes throughout the thermal transition indicate canonical hydrophobic collapse did not drive the Retro-nuclease structural transitions. Temperature-dependent circular dichroism spectroscopy performed on Retro-nuclease and computer simulations correlate to temperature sensitivity in the intrinsic sampling of backbone conformations for polyproline II and α-helix. The experimental results indicate a role for sequence direction in mediating the collapse of the polypeptide chain, whereas the simulation trends illustrate the generality of the observed heat effects on disordered protein structure.Text15 pages1 file (.pdf)ensequence compositionchain collapseheat-sensitive intrinsic disorderprotein structuresChemistry and BiochemistrySequence Reversal Prevents Chain Collapse and Yields Heat-Sensitive Intrinsic DisorderArticlehttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2018.06.006