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Nature 448, 325-329 (19 July 2007) | doi:10.1038/nature05959; Received 31 December 2006; Accepted 25 May 2007

Conformational entropy in molecular recognition by proteins

Kendra King Frederick1, Michael S. Marlow1, Kathleen G. Valentine1 & A. Joshua Wand1

  1. Johnson Research Foundation and Department of Biochemistry & Biophysics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA

Correspondence to: A. Joshua Wand1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to A.J.W. (Email: wand@mail.med.upenn.edu).

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Molecular recognition by proteins is fundamental to almost every biological process, particularly the protein associations underlying cellular signal transduction. Understanding the basis for protein–protein interactions requires the full characterization of the thermodynamics of their association. Historically it has been virtually impossible to experimentally estimate changes in protein conformational entropy, a potentially important component of the free energy of protein association. However, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy has emerged as a powerful tool for characterizing the dynamics of proteins. Here we employ changes in conformational dynamics as a proxy for corresponding changes in conformational entropy. We find that the change in internal dynamics of the protein calmodulin varies significantly on binding a variety of target domains. Surprisingly, the apparent change in the corresponding conformational entropy is linearly related to the change in the overall binding entropy. This indicates that changes in protein conformational entropy can contribute significantly to the free energy of protein–ligand association.

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