The elongated three-helix bundle domains spectrin R16 and R17 fold some two to three orders of magnitude more slowly than their homologue R15. We have shown that this slow folding is due, at least in part, to roughness in the free-energy landscape of R16 and R17. We have proposed that this roughness is due to a frustrated search for the correct docking of partly preformed helices. However, this accounts for only a small part of the slowing of folding and unfolding. Five residues on the A helix of R15, when inserted together into R16 or R17, increase the folding rate constants, reduce landscape roughness, and alter the folding mechanism to one resembling R15. The effect of each of these mutations individually is investigated here. No one mutation causes the behavior seen for the five in combination. However, two mutations, E18F and K25V, significantly increase the folding and unfolding rates of both R16 and R17 but without a concomitant loss in landscape roughness. E18F has the greatest effect on the kinetics, and a Φ-value analysis of the C helix reveals that the folding mechanism is unchanged. For both E18F and K25V the removal of the charge and resultant transition state stabilization is the main origin of the faster folding. Consequently, the major cause of the unusually slow folding of R16 and R17 is the non-native burial of the two charged residues in the transition state. The slowing due to landscape roughness is only about fivefold.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1201793109 | DOI Listing |
Sensors (Basel)
October 2024
School of Mechanical Engineering and Automation, Beihang University, Beijing 100191, China.
Drug Test Anal
December 2024
Shanghai Key Laboratory of Crime Scene Evidence, Shanghai Research Institute of Criminal Science and Technology, Shanghai, China.
Objective: To provide guidance on the future development and role of medical informatics, or biomedical and health informatics, in form of reflections.
Method: To report on the author's previous activities as a medical informatician, which spans almost half a century. It began in 1973 when he started to study medical informatics.
J Phys Chem B
February 2023
Department of Physics, São Paulo State University (UNESP), Institute of Biosciences, Humanities and Exact Sciences, São José do Rio Preto, São Paulo15054-000, Brazil.
Understanding the details of a protein folding mechanism can be a challenging and complex task. One system with an interesting folding behavior is the α-spectrin domain, where the R15 folds three-orders of magnitude faster than its homologues R16 and R17, despite having similar structures. The molecular origins that explain these folding rate differences remain unclear, but our previous work revealed that a combined effect produced by non-native interactions could be a reasonable cause for these differences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
June 2020
Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden;
Proteins synthesized in the cell can begin to fold during translation before the entire polypeptide has been produced, which may be particularly relevant to the folding of multidomain proteins. Here, we study the cotranslational folding of adjacent domains from the cytoskeletal protein α-spectrin using force profile analysis (FPA). Specifically, we investigate how the cotranslational folding behavior of the R15 and R16 domains are affected by their neighboring R14 and R16, and R15 and R17 domains, respectively.
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