Short-lived alpha-helical intermediates in the folding of beta-sheet proteins.


Autoria(s): Chen, E; Everett, ML; Holzknecht, ZE; Holzknecht, RA; Lin, SS; Bowles, DE; Parker, W
Data(s)

06/07/2010

Formato

5609 - 5619

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20515035

Biochemistry, 2010, 49 (26), pp. 5609 - 5619

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/4008

1520-4995

Idioma(s)

ENG

en_US

Relação

Biochemistry

10.1021/bi100288q

Biochemistry

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

Several lines of evidence point strongly toward the importance of highly alpha-helical intermediates in the folding of all globular proteins, regardless of their native structure. However, experimental refolding studies demonstrate no observable alpha-helical intermediate during refolding of some beta-sheet proteins and have dampened enthusiasm for this model of protein folding. In this study, beta-sheet proteins were hypothesized to have potential to form amphiphilic helices at a period of <3.6 residues/turn that matches or exceeds the potential at 3.6 residues/turn. Hypothetically, such potential is the basis for an effective and unidirectional mechanism by which highly alpha-helical intermediates might be rapidly disassembled during folding and potentially accounts for the difficulty in detecting highly alpha-helical intermediates during the folding of some proteins. The presence of this potential was confirmed, indicating that a model entailing ubiquitous formation of alpha-helical intermediates during the folding of globular proteins predicts previously unrecognized features of primary structure. Further, the folding of fatty acid binding protein, a predominantly beta-sheet protein that exhibits no apparent highly alpha-helical intermediate during folding, was dramatically accelerated by 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol, a solvent that stabilizes alpha-helical structure. This observation suggests that formation of an alpha-helix can be a rate-limiting step during folding of a predominantly beta-sheet protein and further supports the role of highly alpha-helical intermediates in the folding of all globular proteins.

Palavras-Chave #Fatty Acid-Binding Proteins #Kinetics #Models, Molecular #Protein Folding #Protein Structure, Secondary #Solvents