Are protein folding intermediates the evolutionary consequence of functional constraints?

J Phys Chem B

Department of Biotechnology, Bhupat & Jyoti Mehta School of Biosciences, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai 600036, India.

Published: January 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • High-resolution studies of two-state proteins reveal that they may exist in partially structured states that are in dynamic balance with their native forms.
  • Researchers used a variety of methods to analyze the folding of Barstar, which exhibits complex conformational behavior, leading to insights about its folding landscape consistent with experimental data.
  • The study suggests that evolutionary pressures to maintain optimal binding with Barnase lead to multistate folding, and specific mutations can enhance stability while simplifying the folding mechanism, indicating that functional demands can shape protein folding behavior.

Article Abstract

High-resolution experiments on several apparently two-state proteins point to the existence of partially structured excited- or intermediate-states in dynamic equilibrium with native states. Are these intermediate states the byproducts of functional constraints that are by necessity evolutionarily conserved or are they merely the hidden imprints of evolutionary processes? To investigate this, we characterize the folding of Barstar that has a rich history of complex conformational behavior employing a combination of methods-statistical-mechanical model, electrostatic calculations, MD simulations and multiple-sequence alignment-that provide a detailed yet consistent view of its landscape in agreement with experiments. We find that the multistate folding in Barstar is the direct consequence of a strong evolutionary pressure to maintain its binding affinity with Barnase through a large negative electrostatic potential on one face. A single mutation (E76K or E80K) at the binding site is shown to not only enhance the native-state stability but also alter the Barstar folding mechanism to resemble an unfrustrated two-state-like system. Our results argue that though natural proteins are expected to be minimally frustrated, functional constraints can singularly determine the folding mechanism even if it occurs at the expense of frustrated multistate folding.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp510342mDOI Listing

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