The health of a cell depends on accurate translation and proper protein folding, whereas misfolding can lead to aggregation and disease. The first opportunity for a protein to fold occurs during translation, when the ribosome and surrounding environment can affect the nascent chain energy landscape. However, quantifying these environmental effects is challenging because ribosomal proteins and rRNA preclude most spectroscopic measurements of protein energetics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
November 2018
Proteins that fold cotranslationally may do so in a restricted configurational space, due to the volume occupied by the ribosome. How does this environment, coupled with the close proximity of the ribosome, affect the folding pathway of a protein? Previous studies have shown that the cotranslational folding process for many proteins, including small, single domains, is directly affected by the ribosome. Here, we investigate the cotranslational folding of an all-β Ig domain, titin I27.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDetermining the relationship between protein folding pathways on and off the ribosome remains an important area of investigation in biology. Studies on isolated domains have shown that alteration of the separation of residues in a polypeptide chain, while maintaining their spatial contacts, may affect protein stability and folding pathway. Due to the vectorial emergence of the polypeptide chain from the ribosome, chain connectivity may have an important influence upon cotranslational folding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn essential step for understanding the transcriptional circuits that control development and physiology is the global identification and characterization of regulatory elements. Here, we present the first map of regulatory elements across the development and ageing of an animal, identifying 42,245 elements accessible in at least one stage. Based on nuclear transcription profiles, we define 15,714 protein-coding promoters and 19,231 putative enhancers, and find that both types of element can drive orientation-independent transcription.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHow do the key features of protein folding, elucidated from studies on native, isolated proteins, manifest in cotranslational folding on the ribosome? Using a well-characterized family of homologous α-helical proteins with a range of biophysical properties, we show that spectrin domains can fold vectorially on the ribosome and may do so via a pathway different from that of the isolated domain. We use cryo-EM to reveal a folded or partially folded structure, formed in the vestibule of the ribosome. Our results reveal that it is not possible to predict which domains will fold within the ribosome on the basis of the folding behavior of isolated domains; instead, we propose that a complex balance of the rate of folding, the rate of translation and the lifetime of folded or partly folded states will determine whether folding occurs cotranslationally on actively translating ribosomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFluorescent protein tags are fundamental tools used to visualize gene products and analyze their dynamics in vivo. Recent advances in genome editing have expedited the precise insertion of fluorescent protein tags into the genomes of diverse organisms. These advances expand the potential of in vivo imaging experiments and facilitate experimentation with new, bright, photostable fluorescent proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvolution and design of protein complexes are almost always viewed through the lens of amino acid mutations at protein interfaces. We showed previously that residues not involved in the physical interaction between proteins make important contributions to oligomerization by acting indirectly or allosterically. In this work, we sought to investigate the mechanism by which allosteric mutations act, using the example of the PyrR family of pyrimidine operon attenuators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCoupled folding and binding of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) is prevalent in biology. As the first step toward understanding the mechanism of binding, it is important to know if a reaction is 'diffusion-limited' as, if this speed limit is reached, the association must proceed through an induced fit mechanism. Here, we use a model system where the 'BH3 region' of PUMA, an IDP, forms a single, contiguous α-helix upon binding the folded protein Mcl-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudying the effects of pathogenic mutations is more complex in multidomain proteins when compared with single domains: mutations occurring at domain boundaries may have a large effect on a neighbouring domain that will not be detected in a single-domain system. To demonstrate this, we present a study that utilizes well-characterized model protein domains from human spectrin to investigate the effect of disease- and non-disease-causing single point mutations occurring at the boundaries of human spectrin repeats. Our results show that mutations in the single domains have no clear correlation with stability and disease; however, when studied in a tandem model system, the disease-causing mutations are shown to disrupt stabilizing interactions that exist between domains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStaphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis form communities (called biofilms) on inserted medical devices, leading to infections that affect many millions of patients worldwide and cause substantial morbidity and mortality. As biofilms are resistant to antibiotics, device removal is often required to resolve the infection. Thus, there is a need for new therapeutic strategies and molecular data that might assist their development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe study of the folding of single domains, in the context of their multidomain environment, is important because more than 70% of eukaryotic proteins are composed of multiple domains. The structures of the tandem immunoglobulin (Ig) domain pairs A164-A165 and A168-A169, from the A-band of the giant muscle protein titin, reveal that they form tightly associated domain arrangements, connected by a continuous β-strand. We investigate the thermodynamic and kinetic properties of these tandem domain pairs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA large range of debilitating medical conditions is linked to protein misfolding, which may compete with productive folding particularly in proteins containing multiple domains. Seventy-five per cent of the eukaryotic proteome consists of multidomain proteins, yet it is not understood how interdomain misfolding is avoided. It has been proposed that maintaining low sequence identity between covalently linked domains is a mechanism to avoid misfolding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnergy landscape theory is a powerful tool for understanding the structure and dynamics of complex molecular systems, in particular biological macromolecules. The primary sequence of a protein defines its free-energy landscape and thus determines the folding pathway and the rate constants of folding and unfolding, as well as the protein's native structure. Theory has shown that roughness in the energy landscape will lead to slower folding, but derivation of detailed experimental descriptions of this landscape is challenging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to elucidate the relative importance of secondary structure and topology in determining folding mechanism, we have carried out a phi-value analysis of the death domain (DD) from human FADD. FADD DD is a 100 amino acid domain consisting of six anti-parallel alpha helices arranged in a Greek key structure. We asked how does the folding of this domain compare with that of (a) other all-alpha-helical proteins and (b) other Greek key proteins? Is the folding pathway determined mainly by secondary structure or is topology the principal determinant? Our Phi-value analysis reveals a striking resemblance to the all-beta Greek key immunoglobulin-like domains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
September 2008
Multidomain proteins account for over two-thirds of the eukaryotic genome. Although there have been extensive studies into the biophysical properties of isolated domains, few have investigated how the domains interact. Spectrin is a well-characterized multidomain protein with domains linked in tandem array by contiguous helices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein engineering Phi-value analysis combined with single molecule atomic force microscopy (AFM) was used to probe the molecular basis for the mechanical stability of TNfn3, the third fibronectin type III domain from human tenascin. This approach has been adopted previously to solve the forced unfolding pathway of a titin immunoglobulin domain, TI I27. TNfn3 and TI I27 are members of different protein superfamilies and have no sequence identity but they have the same beta-sandwich structure consisting of two antiparallel beta-sheets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost protein domains are found in multi-domain proteins, yet most studies of protein folding have concentrated on small, single-domain proteins or on isolated domains from larger proteins. Spectrin domains are small (106 amino acid residues), independently folding domains consisting of three long alpha-helices. They are found in multi-domain proteins with a number of spectrin domains in tandem array.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDynamic force spectroscopy is rapidly becoming a standard biophysical technique. Significant advances in the methods of analysis of force data have resulted in ever more complex systems being studied. The use of cloning systems to produce homologous tandem repeats rather than the use of endogenous multidomain proteins has facilitated these developments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent work has shown that a beta-sandwich domain from the human muscle protein titin (TI I27) unfolds via more than one pathway, providing experimental evidence for a long-standing theoretical prediction in protein folding. Here we present a thermodynamic analysis of two transition states along different folding pathways for this protein. The unusual upwards curvature previously observed in the denaturant-dependent unfolding kinetics is increased at both high and low temperatures, indicating that the high denaturant pathway is becoming more accessible.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTitin I27 shows a high resistance to unfolding when subject to external force. To investigate the molecular basis of this mechanical stability, protein engineering Phi-value analysis has been combined with atomic force microscopy to investigate the structure of the barrier to forced unfolding. The results indicate that the transition state for forced unfolding is significantly structured, since highly destabilising mutations in the core do not affect the force required to unfold the protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndividual molecules of the giant protein titin span the A-bands and I-bands that make up striated muscle. The I-band region of titin is responsible for passive elasticity in such muscle, and contains tandem arrays of immunoglobulin domains. One such domain (I27) has been investigated extensively, using dynamic force spectroscopy and simulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a general approach in which theory and experiments are combined in an iterative manner to provide a detailed description of the transition state ensemble (TSE) for folding. The method is illustrated by applying it to TNfn3, a fibronectin type III domain protein. In the first iteration, a coarse-grained determination of the TSE is carried out by using a limited set of experimental phi values as constraints in a molecular dynamics sampling simulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mechanical unfolding of an immunoglobulin domain from the human muscle protein titin (TI I27) has been shown to proceed via a metastable intermediate in which the A-strand is detached. The structure and properties of this intermediate are characterised in this study. A conservative destabilising mutation in the A-strand has no effect on the unfolding force, nor the dependence of the unfolding force on the pulling speed, indicating that the unfolding forces measured in an AFM experiment are those required for the unfolding of the intermediate and not the native state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis manuscript introduces a versatile system for construction of multimeric proteins to be used as substrates for atomic force microscopy. The construction makes use of a cassette system that allows modules to be cut and ligated in any combination in eight different positions. The modules can be sequenced in situ after construction.
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