In the realm of structural biology, the ability to visualize molecular architectures with atomic precision has revolutionized our understanding of life’s most fundamental processes. However, these atomic-level snapshots, often derived from protein crystallography, convey a static perspective — a still image in a world defined by motion. Yet proteins are not inert sculptures; they breathe, shift, and adapt dynamically, and these motions are frequently critical for their biological functions. An international team of researchers led by scientists at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) now illuminates this elusive dynamism through an innovative synthesis of cutting-edge methodologies. Their work, published in Nature Chemistry, not only challenges the conventional static view but also opens new frontiers in protein design and computational prediction.
For over fifty years, protein crystallography has been the cornerstone technology of structural biology, unveiling the three-dimensional arrangement of atoms within proteins. Despite its unparalleled resolution, this technique yields static models, akin to isolated frames of a choreography never fully captured. The central question raised by the ISTA team is vital: How well do these crystallographic images represent the true dynamism of proteins functioning within living cells?
Lea Becker, the study’s first author and doctoral candidate at ISTA, highlights that proteins are perpetually engaged in complex conformational fluctuations — sometimes described as ‘breathing motions’ — whereby the molecule transiently opens and closes to enable interactions with other biomolecules. These motions, often concealed in standard crystallographic data due to molecular immobilization within the crystal lattice, are fundamental to protein functionality but remain challenging to capture experimentally.
To tackle this challenge, the team combined the strengths of several sophisticated techniques, leveraging X-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics simulations. This integrative approach has unveiled a more holistic portrait of protein behavior, overcoming the limitations of any single method. Their model system was GB1, a small protein known for its structural simplicity yet biological relevance, examined in complex with the IgG antibody both in solid crystalline states and in solution.
Particularly insightful was their focus on the behavior of aromatic rings within amino acid side chains. These rings, hydrophobic by nature, tend to be buried deeply within a protein’s core, away from aqueous environments. The ability of these rings to flip orientations — requiring substantial conformational shifts across the protein — serves as a sensitive molecular reporter for internal movements. By monitoring the kinetics and extent of these flips through state-of-the-art solid-state and solution NMR techniques, alongside enhanced-sampling molecular dynamics simulations, the researchers could infer the degree of flexibility and ‘breathing’ within both crystalline and solution states of GB1.
Their findings revealed that crystallization imposes constraints on protein dynamics, effectively damping the natural flexibility observed in solution. Nevertheless, the aromatic ring flips persisted, albeit at altered rates and amplitudes, indicating that proteins retain some dynamic capacity even within crystalline confines. This nuanced insight challenges previous assumptions that crystallography entirely freezes protein motion, demonstrating instead a reshaped, modulated dynamic landscape.
The implications extend far beyond mere academic curiosity. Understanding how proteins dynamically interact with substrates and binding partners underpins the evolutionary design of biological functions. The emergent field of de novo protein design — synthetic creation of proteins with desired structures and functions — still struggles to replicate the full spectrum of conformational flexibility found in nature. Most machine-designed proteins remain trapped in static conformations, which may underlie their limited functional success.
By elucidating the authentic dynamic behavior of proteins, studies like this lay the groundwork for designing proteins with tailored, functional flexibility, thereby enhancing the efficacy of biomolecular engineering. Furthermore, these insights stand to refine machine learning algorithms in structural biology, notably AlphaFold, which revolutionized protein structure prediction but currently models largely static structures. Incorporating dynamic data promises to bridge the gap between predicted structure and biological reality, accelerating drug discovery and deepening disease understanding.
This research was made possible through interdisciplinary collaboration among experimentalists and theoreticians, combining PhD student Lea Becker’s expertise in method development with Professor Paul Schanda’s long-standing fascination with protein dynamics. Contributions from international partners, including Christophe Chipot and Sylvain Engilberge, enriched the study through access to advanced facilities at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility and expertise in computational modeling.
In sum, this study propels structural biology from static portraits into a dynamic cinema, capturing the invisible ‘breathing’ choreography of proteins that orchestrate life’s molecular symphony. Unmasking these motions not only deepens scientific understanding but also empowers the rational design of biomolecules harnessing nature’s own fluidity, promising a new chapter in biological innovation.
Subject of Research: Cells
Article Title: Aromatic Ring Flips Reveal Reshaping of Protein Dynamics in Crystals and Complexes
News Publication Date: 10-Jun-2026
Web References:
- DOI link to article
- AlphaFold
References:
Lea M. Becker, Haohao Fu, Ben P. Tatman, Matthias Dreydoppel, Anna Kapitonova, Ulrich Weininger, Sylvain Engilberge, Christophe Chipot, and Paul Schanda. 2026. Aromatic Ring Flips Reveal Reshaping of Protein Dynamics in Crystals and Complexes. Nature Chemistry. DOI: 10.1038/s41557-026-02155-0
Image Credits: © ISTA
Keywords
Protein dynamics, Aromatic ring flips, Structural biology, X-ray crystallography, NMR spectroscopy, Molecular dynamics, Protein breathing motions, De novo protein design, Protein flexibility, AlphaFold, Protein-ligand binding, Molecular modeling

