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1.
During co-translational folding, the nascent polypeptide chain is extruded sequentially from the ribosome exit tunnel and, under severe conformational constraints, is dictated by its one-dimensional geometry. How do such vectorial constraints impact the folding pathway? Here, we combine single-molecule atomic force spectroscopy and steered molecular dynamics simulations to examine protein folding in the presence of one-dimensional constraints that are similar to those imposed on the nascent polypeptide chain. The simulations exquisitely reproduced the experimental unfolding and refolding force extension relationships and led to the full reconstruction of the vectorial folding pathway of a large polypeptide, the 253-residue consensus ankyrin repeat protein, NI6C. We show that fully stretched and then relaxed NI6C starts folding by the formation of local secondary structures, followed by the nucleation of three N-terminal repeats. This rate-limiting step is then followed by the vectorial and sequential folding of the remaining repeats. However, after partial unfolding, when allowed to refold, the C-terminal repeats successively regain structures without any nucleation step by using the intact N-terminal repeats as a template. These results suggest a pathway for the co-translational folding of repeat proteins and have implications for mechanotransduction.  相似文献   

2.
Red blood cells are frequently deformed and their cytoskeletal proteins such as spectrin and ankyrin-R are repeatedly subjected to mechanical forces. While the mechanics of spectrin was thoroughly investigated in vitro and in vivo, little is known about the mechanical behavior of ankyrin-R. In this study, we combine coarse-grained steered molecular dynamics simulations and atomic force spectroscopy to examine the mechanical response of ankyrin repeats (ARs) in a model synthetic AR protein NI6C, and in the D34 fragment of native ankyrin-R when these proteins are subjected to various stretching geometry conditions. Our steered molecular dynamics results, supported by AFM measurements, reveal an unusual mechanical anisotropy of ARs: their mechanical stability is greater when their unfolding is forced to propagate from the N-terminus toward the C-terminus (repeats unfold at ~60 pN), as compared to the unfolding in the opposite direction (unfolding force ~ 30 pN). This anisotropy is also reflected in the complex refolding behavior of ARs. The origin of this unfolding and refolding anisotropy is in the various numbers of native contacts that are broken and formed at the interfaces between neighboring repeats depending on the unfolding/refolding propagation directions. Finally, we discuss how these complex mechanical properties of ARs in D34 may affect its behavior in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Li J  Mahajan A  Tsai MD 《Biochemistry》2006,45(51):15168-15178
Ankyrin repeat, one of the most widely existing protein motifs in nature, consists of 30-34 amino acid residues and exclusively functions to mediate protein-protein interactions, some of which are directly involved in the development of human cancer and other diseases. Each ankyrin repeat exhibits a helix-turn-helix conformation, and strings of such tandem repeats are packed in a nearly linear array to form helix-turn-helix bundles with relatively flexible loops. The global structure of an ankyrin repeat protein is mainly stabilized by intra- and inter-repeat hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding interactions. The repetitive and elongated nature of ankyrin repeat proteins provides the molecular bases of the unique characteristics of ankyrin repeat proteins in protein stability, folding and unfolding, and binding specificity. Recent studies have demonstrated that ankyrin repeat proteins do not recognize specific sequences, and interacting residues are discontinuously dispersed into the whole molecules of both the ankyrin repeat protein and its partner. In addition, the availability of thousands of ankyrin repeat sequences has made it feasible to use rational design to modify the specificity and stability of physiologically important ankyrin repeat proteins and even to generate ankyrin repeat proteins with novel functions through combinatorial chemistry approaches.  相似文献   

4.
Spectrin repeats are triple-helical coiled-coil domains found in many proteins that are regularly subjected to mechanical stress. We used atomic force microscopy technique and steered molecular dynamics simulations to study the behavior of a wild-type spectrin repeat and two mutants. The experiments indicate that spectrin repeats can form stable unfolding intermediates when subjected to external forces. In the simulations the unfolding proceeded via a variety of pathways. Stable intermediates were associated to kinking of the central helix close to a proline residue. A mutant stabilizing the central helix showed no intermediates in experiments, in agreement with simulation. Spectrin repeats may thus function as elastic elements, extendable to intermediate states at various lengths.  相似文献   

5.
Protein extensibility appears to be based broadly on conformational changes that can in principle be modulated by protein-protein interactions. Spectrin family proteins, with their extensible three-helix folds, enable evaluation of dimerization effects at the single molecule level by atomic force microscopy. Although some spectrin family members function physiologically only as homodimers (e.g. alpha-actinin) or are strictly monomers (e.g. dystrophin), alpha- and beta-spectrins are stable as monomeric forms but occur physiologically as alpha,beta-heterodimers bound laterally lengthwise. For short constructs of alpha- and beta-spectrin, either as monomers or as alpha,beta-dimers, sawtooth patterns in atomic force microscopy-forced extension show that unfolding stochastically extends repeats approximately 4-5-fold greater in length than native conformations. For both dimers and monomers, distributions of unfolding lengths appear bimodal; major unfolding peaks reflect single repeats, and minor unfolding peaks at twice the length reflect tandem repeats. Cooperative unfolding thus propagates through helical linkers between serial repeats (1, 2). With lateral heterodimers, however, the force distribution is broad and shifted to higher forces. The associated chains in a dimer can stay together and unfold simultaneously in addition to unfolding independently. Weak lateral interactions do not inhibit unfolding, but strong lateral interactions facilitate simultaneous unfolding analogous to serial repeat coupling within spectrin family proteins.  相似文献   

6.
M E Zweifel  D Barrick 《Biochemistry》2001,40(48):14357-14367
To define the boundaries of the Drosophila Notch ankyrin domain, examine the effects of repeat number on the folding of this domain, and examine the degree to which the modular architecture of ankyrin repeat proteins results in modular stability, we have investigated the thermodynamics of unfolding of polypeptides corresponding to different segments of the ankyrin repeats of Drosophila Notch. We find that a polypeptide containing the six previously identified ankyrin repeats unfolds cooperatively, but is of modest stability. However, inclusion of a putative seventh, C-terminal ankyrin sequence doubles the stability of the Notch ankyrin domain (a 1000-fold increase in the folding equilibrium constant), indicating that the seventh ankyrin repeat is an important part of the Notch ankyrin domain, and demonstrating long-range interactions among ankyrin repeats. This putative seven-repeat polypeptide also shows increases in enthalpy, denaturant dependence (m-value), and heat capacity of unfolding (DeltaC(p)()) of around 50% each, suggesting that deletion of the seventh repeat results in partial unfolding of the sixth ankyrin repeat, consistent with spectroscopic and hydrodynamic data reported in the preceding paper [Zweifel, M. E., and Barrick, D. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 14344-14356]. A polypeptide consisting of only the five N-terminal repeats has stability similar to the six-repeat construct, demonstrating that stability is distributed asymmetrically along the ankyrin domain. These data are consistent with highly cooperative two-state folding of these ankyrin polypeptides, despite their modular architecture.  相似文献   

7.
Proteins constructed from linear arrays of tandem repeats provide a simplified architecture for understanding protein folding. Here, we examine the folding kinetics of the ankyrin repeat domain from the Drosophila Notch receptor, which consists of six folded ankyrin modules and a seventh partly disordered N-terminal ankyrin repeat sequence. Both the refolding and unfolding kinetics are best described as a sum of two exponential phases. The slow, minor refolding phase is limited by prolyl isomerization in the denatured state (D). The minor unfolding phase, which appears as a lag during fluorescence-detected unfolding, is consistent with an on-pathway intermediate (I). This intermediate, although not directly detected during refolding, is shown to be populated by interrupted refolding experiments. When plotted against urea, the rate constants for the major unfolding and refolding phases define a single non-linear v-shaped chevron, as does the minor unfolding phase. These two chevrons, along with unfolding amplitudes, are well-fitted by a sequential three-state model, which yields rate constants for the individual steps in folding and unfolding. Based on these fitted parameters, the D to I step is rate-limiting, and closely matches the major observed refolding phase at low denaturant concentrations. I appears to be midway between N and D in folding free energy and denaturant sensitivity, but has Trp fluorescence properties close to N. Although the Notch ankyrin domain has a simple architecture, folding is slow, with the limiting refolding rate constant as much as seven orders of magnitude smaller than expected from topological predictions.  相似文献   

8.
Ankyrin repeat polypeptides contain repeated structural elements that pack to produce modular architectures lacking in close contacts between distant segments of the polypeptide chain. Despite this lack of sequence-distant contacts, ankyrin repeat polypeptides have been shown to fold in a cooperative manner. To determine the distance over which cooperative interactions can be propagated in a repeat protein, and to investigate the tolerance to internal duplication and deletion of modules, we have constructed a series of ankyrin repeat variants of the Notch ankyrin domain in which repeat number is varied by duplication and deletion of internal repeats. A construct with two copies of the fifth ankyrin repeat shows a modest increase in stability compared to the parent construct and retains apparent two-state unfolding behavior. Although constructs containing three and four copies of the fifth repeat retain this increased resistance to urea, they exhibit broad, multi-state unfolding transitions compared to the parent construct. For the Notch ankyrin domain, these larger constructs may represent a limit beyond which full cooperativity cannot be maintained. Deletions of internal repeats from the Notch ankyrin domain significantly destabilize the domain. This severe destabilization, which is larger than that resulting from end-repeat deletion, may arise from unfavorable interactions within the new non-native interfaces produced by internal repeat deletion. These results demonstrate both an asymmetry between the duplication and deletion of internal repeats, and a difference between deletion of internal and end-repeats, suggesting preferred mechanisms for evolution of repeat proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Multiple molecular dynamics simulations with explicit solvent at room temperature and at 400 K were carried out to characterize designed ankyrin repeat (AR) proteins with full-consensus repeats. Using proteins with one to five repeats, the stability of the native structure was found to increase with the number of repeats. The C-terminal capping repeat, originating from the natural guanine-adenine-binding protein, was observed to denature first in almost all high-temperature simulations. Notably, a stable intermediate is found in experimental equilibrium unfolding studies of one of the simulated consensus proteins. On the basis of simulation results, this intermediate is interpreted to represent a conformation with a denatured C-terminal repeat. To validate this interpretation, constructs without C-terminal capping repeat were prepared and did not show this intermediate in equilibrium unfolding experiments. Conversely, the capping repeats were found to be essential for efficient folding in the cell and for avoiding aggregation, presumably because of their highly charged surface. To design a capping repeat conferring similar solubility properties yet even higher stability, eight point mutations adapting the C-cap to the consensus AR and adding a three-residue extension at the C-terminus were predicted in silico and validated experimentally. The in vitro full-consensus proteins were also compared with a previously published designed AR protein, E3_5, whose internal repeats show 80% identity in primary sequence. A detailed analysis of the simulations suggests that networks of salt bridges between β-hairpins, as well as additional interrepeat hydrogen bonds, contribute to the extraordinary stability of the full consensus.  相似文献   

10.
Gankyrin is a 25-kDa hepatocellular carcinoma-associated protein that mediates protein-protein interactions in cell cycle control and protein degradation. It has been reported to form complexes with cyclin-dependent kinase 4, retinoblastoma protein, the S6b ATPase subunit of the 19 S regulator of the 26 S proteasome, and Mdm2, an E3 ubiquitin ligase involved in p53 degradation. It is the first protein described to bind both to the 26 S proteasome and to proteins in other complexes containing cyclin-dependent kinase(s) and p53 ubiquitylating activities, thus providing a mechanism for delivering cell cycle regulating machinery and ubiquitylated substrates to the proteasome for degradation. Gankyrin contains a 33-residue motif known as the ankyrin repeat that occurs five and a half to six times in the sequence. As a step toward understanding gankyrin interactions with its protein partners we have determined its three-dimensional crystal structure to 2.0-A resolution. It reveals that the entire 226-residue gankyrin polypeptide folds into seven ankyrin repeat elements. The ankyrin repeats, consisting of an antiparallel beta-hairpin followed by a perpendicularly oriented helix-loop-helix, pack side-by-side, creating an extended curved structure with a groove running across the long concave surface. Comparison with the structures of other ankyrin repeat proteins suggests that interactions with partner proteins are mediated by residues situated on this concave surface.  相似文献   

11.
Pathways of unfolding a protein depend in principle on the perturbation-whether it is temperature, denaturant, or even forced extension. Widely-shared, helical-bundle spectrin repeats are known to melt at temperatures as low as 40-45 degrees C and are also known to unfold via multiple pathways as single molecules in atomic force microscopy. Given the varied roles of spectrin family proteins in cell deformability, we sought to determine the coupled effects of temperature on forced unfolding. Bimodal distributions of unfolding intervals are seen at all temperatures for the four-repeat beta(1-4) spectrin-an alpha-actinin homolog. The major unfolding length corresponds to unfolding of a single repeat, and a minor peak at twice the length corresponds to tandem repeats. Increasing temperature shows fewer tandem events but has no effect on unfolding intervals. As T approaches T(m), however, mean unfolding forces in atomic force microscopy also decrease; and circular dichroism studies demonstrate a nearly proportional decrease of helical content in solution. The results imply a thermal softening of a helical linker between repeats which otherwise propagates a helix-to-coil transition to adjacent repeats. In sum, structural changes with temperature correlate with both single-molecule unfolding forces and shifts in unfolding pathways.  相似文献   

12.
Full-consensus designed ankyrin repeat proteins were designed with one to six identical repeats flanked by capping repeats. These proteins express well in Escherichia coli as soluble monomers. Compared to our previously described designed ankyrin repeat protein library, randomized positions have now been fixed according to sequence statistics and structural considerations. Their stability increases with length and is even higher than that of library members, and those with more than three internal repeats are resistant to denaturation by boiling or guanidine hydrochloride. Full denaturation requires their heating in 5 M guanidine hydrochloride. The folding and unfolding kinetics of the proteins with up to three internal repeats were analyzed, as the other proteins could not be denatured. Folding is monophasic, with a rate that is nearly identical for all proteins (∼ 400-800 s− 1), indicating that essentially the same transition state must be crossed, possibly the folding of a single repeat. In contrast, the unfolding rate decreases by a factor of about 104 with increasing repeat number, directly reflecting thermodynamic stability in these extraordinarily slow denaturation rates. The number of unfolding phases also increases with repeat number. We analyzed the folding thermodynamics and kinetics both by classical two-state and three-state cooperative models and by an Ising-like model, where repeats are considered as two-state folding units that can be stabilized by interacting with their folded nearest neighbors. This Ising model globally describes both equilibrium and kinetic data very well and allows for a detailed explanation of the ankyrin repeat protein folding mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
Repeat proteins are constructed from a linear array of modular units, giving rise to an overall topology lacking long-range interactions. This suggests that stabilizing repeat modules based on consensus information might be added to a repeat protein domain, allowing it to be extended without altering its overall topology. Here we add consensus modules the ankyrin repeat domain from the Drosophila Notch receptor to investigate the structural tolerance to these modules, the relative thermodynamic stability of these hybrid proteins, and how alterations in the energy landscape influence folding kinetics. Insertions of consensus modules between repeats five and six of the Notch ankyrin domain have little effect on the far and near-UV CD spectra, indicating that neither secondary nor tertiary structure is dramatically altered. Furthermore, stable structure is maintained at increased denaturant concentrations in the polypeptides containing the consensus repeats, indicating that the consensus modules are capable of stabilizing much of the domain. However, insertion of the consensus repeats appears to disrupt cooperativity, producing a two-stage (three-state) unfolding transition in which the C-terminal repeats unfold at moderate urea concentrations. Removing the C-terminal repeats (Notch ankyrin repeats six and seven) restores equilibrium two-state folding and demonstrates that the high stability of the consensus repeats is propagated into the N-terminal, naturally occurring Notch ankyrin repeats. This stability increase greatly increases the folding rate, and suggests that the transition state ensemble may be repositioned in the chimeric consensus-stabilized proteins in response to local stability.  相似文献   

14.
Li J  Tsai MD 《Biochemistry》2002,41(12):3977-3983
The newly discovered oncogenic protein gankyrin, which contains six ankyrin repeats, has been reported to be involved in the phosphorylation and degradation of the retinoblastoma gene product, Rb. Using in vitro systems, we have identified a peptide fragment of gankyrin, 176LHLACDEERN185, which is responsible for binding of gankyrin to Rb. We further demonstrated a different mechanism for gankyrin to facilitate the phosphorylation of Rb, by binding with cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4). This binding does not inhibit the Rb-phosphorylating kinase activity of CDK4, but it competes with p16 binding to CDK4 and counteracts the inhibitory function of p16. We then showed that binding of gankyrin to CDK4 and the consequent counter action of p16 function were not affected by the Rb-binding peptide 176LHLACDEERN185, indicating that the two mechanisms are independent. They also involve different structural regions of gankyrin. While the Rb-binding motif is located at the fifth ankyrin repeat, truncation mutants of gankyrin, with the first three or four ankyrin repeats remaining, are sufficient for binding to CDK4 and for counteracting the inhibitory function of p16. These results demonstrate the potential importance of gankyrin in cell cycle control and tumorigenesis and suggest an expanded INK4-CDK4/6-Rb pathway.  相似文献   

15.
Ankyrin repeat proteins are elastic materials that unfold and refold sequentially, repeat by repeat, under force. Herein we use atomistic molecular dynamics to compare the mechanical properties of the 7-ankyrin-repeat oncoprotein Gankyrin in isolation and in complex with its binding partner S6-C. We show that the bound S6-C greatly increases the resistance of Gankyrin to mechanical stress. The effect is specific to those repeats of Gankyrin directly in contact with S6-C, and the mechanical ‘hot spots’ of the interaction map to the same repeats as the thermodynamic hot spots. A consequence of stepwise nature of unfolding and the localized nature of ligand binding is that it impacts on all aspects of the protein''s mechanical behavior, including the order of repeat unfolding, the diversity of unfolding pathways accessed, the nature of partially unfolded intermediates, the forces required and the work transferred to the system to unfold the whole protein and its parts. Stepwise unfolding thus provides the means to buffer repeat proteins and their binding partners from mechanical stress in the cell. Our results illustrate how ligand binding can control the mechanical response of proteins. The data also point to a cellular mechano-switching mechanism whereby binding between two partner macromolecules is regulated by mechanical stress.  相似文献   

16.
Force-driven conformational changes provide a broad basis for protein extensibility, and multidomain proteins broaden the possibilities further by allowing for a multiplicity of forcibly extended states. Red cell spectrin is prototypical in being an extensible, multidomain protein widely recognized for its contribution to erythrocyte flexibility. Atomic force microscopy has already shown that single repeats of various spectrin family proteins can be forced to unfold reversibly under extension. Recent structural data indicates, however, that the linker between triple-helical spectrin repeats is often a contiguous helix, thus raising questions as to what the linker contributes and what defines a domain mechanically. We have examined the extensible unfolding of red cell spectrins as monomeric constructs of just two, three, or four repeats from the actin-binding ends of both alpha- and beta-chains, i.e., alpha(18-21) and beta(1-4) or their subfragments. In addition to single repeat unfolding evident in sawtooth patterns peaked at relatively low forces (<50 pN at 1 nm/ms extension rates), tandem repeat unfolding is also demonstrated in ensemble-scale analyses of thousands of atomic force microscopy contacts. Evidence for extending two chains and loops is provided by force versus length scatterplots which also indicate that tandem repeat unfolding occurs at a significant frequency relative to single repeat unfolding. Cooperativity in forced unfolding of spectrin is also clearly demonstrated by a common force scale for the unfolding of both single and tandem repeats.  相似文献   

17.
18.
We consider the mechanical stretching of a polypeptide chain formed by multiple interacting repeats. The folding thermodynamics and the interactions among the repeats are described by the Ising model. Unfolded repeats act as soft entropic springs, whereas folded repeats respond to a force as stiffer springs. We show that the resulting force-extension curve may exhibit a pronounced force maximum corresponding to the unfolding of the first repeat. This event is followed by the unfolding of the remaining repeats, which takes place at a lower force. As the protein extension is increased, the force-extension curve of a sufficiently long repeat protein displays a plateau, where the force remains nearly constant and the protein unfolds sequentially so that the number of unfolded repeats is proportional to the extension. Such a sequential mechanical unfolding mechanism is displayed even by the repeat proteins whose thermal denaturation is highly cooperative, provided that they are long enough. By contrast, the unfolding of short repeat progressions can be cooperative.  相似文献   

19.
The ankyrin repeat is one of the most common protein motifs and is involved in protein-protein interactions. It consists of 33 residues that assume a beta-hairpin helix-loop-helix fold. Mutagenesis and kinetic experiments (Phi-value analysis of the folding transition state) have shown that the tumor suppressor p16(INK4a), a four-repeat protein, unfolds sequentially starting from the two N-terminal repeats. Here, the flexibility of p16(INK4a) at room temperature and its unfolding mechanism at high temperature have been investigated by multiple molecular dynamics runs in explicit water for a total simulation time of 0.65 micros. The transition state ensemble (TSE) of p16(INK4a) was identified by monitoring both the deviation from the experimental Phi values and sudden conformational changes along the unfolding trajectories. Conformations in the TSE have a mainly unstructured second repeat whereas the other repeats are almost completely folded. A rigid-body displacement of the first repeat involving both a rotation and translation is observed in all molecular dynamics simulations at high temperature. The Trp(15), Pro(75), and Ala(76) side-chains are more buried in the TSE than the native state. The sequential unfolding starting at the second repeat is in agreement with the mutagenesis studies whereas the displacement of the first repeat and the presence of nonnative interactions at the TSE are simulation results which supplement the experimental data. Furthermore, the unfolding trajectories reveal the presence of two on-pathway intermediates with partial alpha-helical structure. Finally, on the basis of the available experimental and simulation results we suggest that in modular proteins the shift of the folding TSE toward the native structure upon reduction of the number of tandem repeats is consistent with the Hammond effect.  相似文献   

20.
The ankyrin repeat is an abundant, 33 residue sequence motif that forms a consecutive beta-hairpin-helix-loop-helix (beta(2)alpha(2)) fold. Most ankyrin repeat proteins consist of four or more complete repeats, which provide stabilizing interactions between adjacent modules. The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor and tumor suppressor p16(INK4) (p16) is one of the smallest ankyrin repeat proteins with a known structure. It consists of four complete repeats plus short N and C-terminal flanking regions that are unstructured in solution. On the basis of preliminary proteolysis studies and predictions using a computer algorithm for identifying autonomous folding units, we have identified a fragment consisting of the third and fourth ankyrin repeats of p16, called p16C, that can fold independently, without the rest of the protein. Far-UV circular dichroism studies showed that p16C has a significant level of alpha-helical secondary structure, and two proline substitutions that disrupt the alpha-helical secondary structure in wild-type p16 disrupt the secondary structure in p16C. The thermal denaturation of p16C is cooperative and reversible, with a midpoint of transition at 30. 5(+/-1) degrees C. From urea-induced denaturation studies, the free energy of unfolding for p16C was estimated to be 1.7(+/-0.3) kcal/mol at 20 degrees C. (1)H-(15)N 2D NMR studies suggest that the ankyrin repeats in p16C are likely to fold into a structure similar to that of full-length p16. In order to define the minimum autonomous folding unit in p16, we have further dissected p16C into two complementary peptides, each containing a single ankyrin repeat. These peptides are unstructured in solution. Thus, p16C is the smallest ankyrin repeat module that is known to fold independently and, in general, we believe that the two-ankyrin repeat fold could be the minimum structural unit for all ankyrin repeat proteins. We further discuss the significance of p16C in protein folding and engineering.  相似文献   

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