Intrinsically disordered proteins can behave as different polymers across their conformational ensemble

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Abstract

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are macromolecules, which in contrast to well-folded proteins, explore a large number of conformationally heterogeneous states. In this work, we investigate the conformational space of the disordered protein β -casein using Hamiltonian replica exchange atomistic molecular dynamics simulations in explicit water. The energy landscape contains a global minimum along with two shallow funnels. Employing static polymeric scaling laws separately for individual funnels, we find that they cannot be described by the same polymeric scaling exponent. Around the global minimum, the conformations are globular, whereas in the vicinity of local minima we recover coil-like scaling. To elucidate the implications of structural diversity on equilibrium dynamics, we initiate standard molecular dynamics simulations in the NVT ensemble with representative conformations from each funnel. Global and internal motions for different classes of trajectories show heterogeneous dynamics with globule to coil-like signatures. Thus, IDPs can behave as entirely different polymers in different regions of the conformational space.

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