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1.
Protein 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. TNfn3, however, unfolds at significantly lower forces than TI I27. We compare the response of these proteins to mechanical force. Mutational analysis shows that, as is the case with TI I27, TNfn3 unfolds via a force-stabilised intermediate. The key event in forced unfolding in TI I27 is largely the breaking of hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions between the A' and G-strands. The mechanical Phi-value analysis and molecular dynamics simulations reported here reveal that significantly more of the TNfn3 molecule contributes to its resistance to force. Both AFM experimental data and molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the rate-limiting step of TNfn3 forced unfolding reflects a transition from the extended early intermediate to an aligned intermediate state. As well as losses of interactions of the A and G-strands and associated loops there are rearrangements throughout the core. As was the case for TI I27, the forced unfolding pathway of TNfn3 is different from that observed in denaturant studies in the absence of force.  相似文献   

2.
The 37-residue Formin-binding protein, FBP28, is a canonical three-stranded beta-sheet WW domain. Because of its small size, it is so insensitive to chemical denaturation that it is barely possible to determine accurately a denaturation curve, as the transition spans 0-7 M guanidinium hydrochloride (GdmCl). It is also only marginally stable, with a free energy of denaturation of just 2.3 kcal/mol at 10 degrees Celsius so only small changes in energy upon mutation can be tolerated. But these properties and relaxation times for folding of 25 micros-400 micros conspire to allow the rapid acquisition of accurate and reproducible kinetic data for Phi-analysis using classical temperature-jump methods. The transition state for folding is highly polarized with some regions having Phi-values of 0 and others 1, as readily seen in chevron plots, with Phi-values of 0 having the refolding arms overlaying and those of 1 the unfolding arms superimposable. Good agreement is seen with transition state structures identified from independent molecular dynamics (MD) simulations at 60, 75, and 100 degrees Celsius, which allows us to explore further the details of the folding and unfolding pathway of FBP28. The first beta-turn is near native-like in the transition state for folding (experimental) and unfolding (MD and experiment). The simulations show that there are transient contacts between the aromatic side-chains of the beta-strands in the denatured state and that these interactions provide the driving force for folding of the first beta-hairpin of this three-stranded sheet. Only after the backbone hydrogen bonds are formed between beta1 and beta2 does a hydrogen bond form to stabilize the intervening turn, or the first beta-turn.  相似文献   

3.
Simulated refolding of stretched titin immunoglobulin domains   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Gao M  Lu H  Schulten K 《Biophysical journal》2001,81(4):2268-2277
Steered molecular dynamics (SMD) is used to investigate forced unfolding and spontaneous refolding of immunoglobulin I27, a domain of the muscle protein titin. Previous SMD simulations revealed the events leading to stretch-induced unfolding of I27, the rupture of hydrogen bonds bridging beta-strands A and B, and those bridging beta-strands A' and G, the latter rupture occurring at an extension of approximately 15 A and preceding the complete unfolding. Simulations are now used to study the refolding of partially unfolded I27 domains. The results reveal that stretched domains with ruptured interstrand hydrogen bonds shrink along the extension direction. Two types of refolding patterns are recognized: for separated beta-strands A' and G, in most simulations five of the six hydrogen bonds between A' and G stably reformed in 2 ns, whereas for separated beta-strands A and B hydrogen bonds seldom reformed in eight 2-ns simulations. The mechanical stability of the partially refolded intermediates has been tested by re-stretching.  相似文献   

4.
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) experiments have provided intriguing insights into the mechanical unfolding of proteins such as titin I27 from muscle, but will the same be possible for proteins that are not physiologically required to resist force? We report the results of AFM experiments on the forced unfolding of barnase in a chimeric construct with I27. Both modules are independently folded and stable in this construct and have the same thermodynamic and kinetic properties as the isolated proteins. I27 can be identified in the AFM traces based on its previous characterization, and distinct, irregular low-force peaks are observed for barnase. Molecular dynamics simulations of barnase unfolding also show that it unfolds at lower forces than proteins with mechanical function. The unfolding pathway involves the unraveling of the protein from the termini, with much more native-like secondary and tertiary structure being retained in the transition state than is observed in simulations of thermal unfolding or experimentally, using chemical denaturant. Our results suggest that proteins that are not selected for tensile strength may not resist force in the same way as those that are, and that proteins with similar unfolding rates in solution need not have comparable unfolding properties under force.  相似文献   

5.
Steered molecular dynamics studies of titin I1 domain unfolding   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The cardiac muscle protein titin, responsible for developing passive elasticity and extensibility of muscle, possesses about 40 immunoglobulin-like (Ig) domains in its I-band region. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) and steered molecular dynamics (SMD) have been successfully combined to investigate the reversible unfolding of individual Ig domains. However, previous SMD studies of titin I-band modules have been restricted to I27, the only structurally known Ig domain from the distal region of the titin I-band. In this paper we report SMD simulations unfolding I1, the first structurally available Ig domain from the proximal region of the titin I-band. The simulations are carried out with a view toward upcoming atomic force microscopy experiments. Both constant velocity and constant force stretching have been employed to model mechanical unfolding of oxidized I1, which has a disulfide bond bridging beta-strands C and E, as well as reduced I1, in which the disulfide bridge is absent. The simulations reveal that I1 is protected against external stress mainly through six interstrand hydrogen bonds between its A and B beta-strands. The disulfide bond enhances the mechanical stability of oxidized I1 domains by restricting the rupture of backbone hydrogen bonds between the A'- and G-strands. The disulfide bond also limits the maximum extension of I1 to approximately 220 A. Comparison of the unfolding pathways of I1 and I27 are provided and implications to AFM experiments are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
TI I27, a beta-sandwich domain from the human muscle protein titin, has been shown to fold via two alternative pathways, which correspond to a change in the folding mechanism. Under physiological conditions, TI I27 folds by a classical nucleation-condensation mechanism (diffuse transition state), whereas at extreme conditions of temperature and denaturant it switches to having a polarized transition state. We have used experimental Phi-values as restraints in ensemble-averaged molecular dynamics simulations to determine the ensembles of structures representing the two transition states. The comparison of these ensembles indicates that when native interactions are substantially weakened, a protein may still be able to fold if it can access an alternative transition state characterized by a much larger entropic contribution. Analysis of the probability distribution of Phi-values derived from ensemble averaged simulations, enables us to identify residues that form contacts in some members of the ensemble but not in others illustrating that many interactions present in transition states are not strictly required for the successful completion of the folding process.  相似文献   

7.
To better characterize the transition state for folding/unfolding and its sensitivity to environmental changes, we have run multiple molecular dynamics simulations of chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2) under varying solvent conditions and temperature. The transition state structures agree well with experiment, and are similar under all of the conditions investigated here. Increasing the temperature leads to some movement in the position of the transition state along several reaction coordinates, as measured by changes in properties of the transition state structures. These structural changes are in the direction of a more native-like transition state as denaturation conditions become more severe, as expected for a Hammond effect. These structural changes are not, however, reflected in the global structure as measured by the total number of contacts or the average S-values. These results suggest that the small changes in average Phi-values with temperature seen by experiment may be due to an increase in the sensitivity of the transition state to mutation rather than a change in the average structure of the transition state. A simple analysis of the rates of unfolding indicates that the free energy barrier to unfolding decreases with increasing temperature, but even in our very high temperature simulations there is a small free energy barrier.  相似文献   

8.
Lu W  Negi SS  Oberhauser AF  Braun W 《Proteins》2012,80(5):1308-1315
Use of atomic force microscopy (AFM) has recently led to a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms of the unfolding process by mechanical forces; however, the rational design of novel proteins with specific mechanical strength remains challenging. We have approached this problem from a new perspective that generates linear physical–chemical properties (PCP) motifs from a limited AFM data set. Guided by our linear sequence analysis, we designed and analyzed four new mutants of the titin I1 domain with the goal of increasing the domain's mechanical strength. All four mutants could be cloned and expressed as soluble proteins. AFM data indicate that at least two of the mutants have increased molecular mechanical strength. This observation suggests that the PCP method is useful to graft sequences specific for high mechanical stability to weak proteins to increase their mechanical stability, and represents an additional tool in the design of novel proteins besides steered molecular dynamics calculations, coarse grained simulations, and ?‐value analysis of the transition state. Proteins 2012; © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Recent advances in experimental and computational methods have made it possible to determine with considerable accuracy the structures whose formation is rate limiting for the folding of some small proteins-the transition state ensemble, or TSE. We present a method to analyze and validate all-atom models of such structures. The method is based on the comparison of experimental data with the computation of the change in free energy of the TSE resulting from specific mutations. Each mutation is modeled individually in all members of an ensemble of transition state structures using a method originally developed to predict mutational changes in the stability of native proteins. We first apply this method to six proteins for which we have determined the TSEs with a technique that uses experimental mutational data (Phi-values) as restraints in the structure determination and find a highly significant correlation between the calculated free energy changes and those derived from experimental kinetic data. We then use the procedure to analyze transition state structures determined by molecular dynamics simulations of unfolding, again finding a high correlation. Finally, we use the method to estimate changes in folding rates of several hydrophobic core mutants of Fyn SH3. Taken together, these results show that the procedure developed here is a tool of general validity for analyzing, assessing, and improving the quality of the structures of transition states for protein folding.  相似文献   

10.
Urea-induced protein denaturation is widely used to study protein folding and stability; however, the molecular mechanism and driving forces of this process are not yet fully understood. In particular, it is unclear whether either hydrophobic or polar interactions between urea molecules and residues at the protein surface drive denaturation. To address this question, here, many molecular dynamics simulations totalling ca. 7 µs of the CI2 protein in aqueous solution served to perform a computational thought experiment, in which we varied the polarity of urea. For apolar driving forces, hypopolar urea should show increased denaturation power; for polar driving forces, hyperpolar urea should be the stronger denaturant. Indeed, protein unfolding was observed in all simulations with decreased urea polarity. Hyperpolar urea, in contrast, turned out to stabilize the native state. Moreover, the differential interaction preferences between urea and the 20 amino acids turned out to be enhanced for hypopolar urea and suppressed (or even inverted) for hyperpolar urea. These results strongly suggest that apolar urea–protein interactions, and not polar interactions, are the dominant driving force for denaturation. Further, the observed interactions provide a detailed picture of the underlying molecular driving forces. Our simulations finally allowed characterization of CI2 unfolding pathways. Unfolding proceeds sequentially with alternating loss of secondary or tertiary structure. After the transition state, unfolding pathways show large structural heterogeneity.  相似文献   

11.
Experimental studies have indicated that FN-III modules undergo reversible unfolding as a mechanism of elasticity. The unfolding of FN-III modules, including the cell-binding FN-III(10) module, has further been suggested to be functionally relevant by exposing buried cryptic sites or modulating cell binding. While steered molecular dynamics (SMD) simulations have provided one tool to investigate this process, computational requirements so far have limited detailed analysis to the early stages of unfolding. Here, we use an extended periodic box to probe the unfolding of FN-III(10) for extensions longer than 60A. Up to three plateaus, corresponding to three metastable intermediates, were observed in the extension-time profile from SMD stretching of FN-III(10). The first and second plateaus correspond to a twisted and an aligned state prior to unraveling FN-III(10) beta-strands. The third plateau, at an extension of approximately 100A, follows unraveling of FN-III(10) A and B-strands and precedes breaking of inter-strand hydrogen bonds between F and G-strands. The simulations revealed three forced unfolding pathways of FN-III(10), one of which is preferentially selected under physiological conditions. Implications for fibronectin fibrillogenesis are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The folding properties of wild type and mutants of domain C5 from cardiac myosin binding protein C have been investigated via molecular dynamics simulations within the framework of a native-centric and coarse-grained model. The relevance of a mutation has been assessed through the shift in the unfolding temperature, the change in the unfolding rate it determines and Phi-values analysis. In a previous paper (Guardiani et al. Biophys J 94:1403-1411, 2008), we performed Kinetic simulations on native contact formation revealing an entropy-driven folding pathway originating near the FG and DE loops. This folding mechanism allowed also a possible interpretation of the molecular impact of the three mutations, Arg14His, Arg28His and Asn115Lys involved in the Familial Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy. Here we extend that analysis by enriching the mutant pool and we identify a correlation between unfolding rates and the number of native contacts retained in the transition state.  相似文献   

13.
In the last decade atomic force microscopy has been used to measure the mechanical stability of single proteins. These force spectroscopy experiments have shown that many water-soluble and membrane proteins unfold via one or more intermediates. Recently, Li and co-workers found a linear correlation between the unfolding force of the native state and the intermediate in fibronectin, which they suggested indicated the presence of a molecular memory or multiple unfolding pathways (1). Here, we apply two independent methods in combination with Monte Carlo simulations to analyze the unfolding of alpha-helices E and D of bacteriorhodopsin (BR). We show that correlation analysis of unfolding forces is very sensitive to errors in force calibration of the instrument. In contrast, a comparison of relative forces provides a robust measure for the stability of unfolding intermediates. The proposed approach detects three energetically different states of alpha-helices E and D in trimeric BR. These states are not observed for monomeric BR and indicate that substantial information is hidden in forced unfolding experiments of single proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Steered molecular dynamics simulation of force-induced titin immunoglobulin domain I27 unfolding led to the discovery of a significant potential energy barrier at an extension of approximately 14 A on the unfolding pathway that protects the domain against stretching. Previous simulations showed that this barrier is due to the concurrent breaking of six interstrand hydrogen bonds (H-bonds) between beta-strands A' and G that is preceded by the breaking of two to three hydrogen bonds between strands A and B, the latter leading to an unfolding intermediate. The simulation results are supported by Angstrom-resolution atomic force microscopy data. Here we perform a structural and energetic analysis of the H-bonds breaking. It is confirmed that H-bonds between strands A and B break rapidly. However, the breaking of the H-bond between strands A' and G needs to be assisted by fluctuations of water molecules. In nanosecond simulations, water molecules are found to repeatedly interact with the protein backbone atoms, weakening individual interstrand H-bonds until all six A'-G H-bonds break simultaneously under the influence of external stretching forces. Only when those bonds are broken can the generic unfolding take place, which involves hydrophobic interactions of the protein core and exerts weaker resistance against stretching than the key event.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Folding reaction of goat alpha-lactalbumin has been studied by stopped-flow circular dichroism and molecular dynamics simulations. The effects of four single mutations and a double mutation on the stability of the protein under a native condition were studied. The mutations were introduced into residues located at a hydrophobic core in the alpha-domain of the molecule. Here we show that an amino acid substitution (T29I) increases the native-state stability of goat alpha-lactalbumin against the guanidine hydrochloride-induced unfolding by 3.5 kcal/mol. Kinetic refolding and unfolding of wild-type and mutant goat alpha-lactalbumin measured by stopped-flow circular dichroism showed that the local structure around the Thr29 side chain was not constructed in the transition state of the folding reaction. To characterize the local structural change around the Thr29 side chain to an atomic level of resolution, we performed high-temperature (at 400 K and 600 K) molecular dynamics simulations and studied the structural change at an initial stage of unfolding observed in the simulation trajectories. The Thr29 portion of the molecule experienced structural disruption accompanied with the loss of inter-residue contacts and with the water molecule penetration in the 400-K simulation as well as in four of the six 600-K simulations. Disruption of the N-terminal portion was also observed and was consistent with the results of kinetic refolding/unfolding experiments shown in our previous report.  相似文献   

17.
In the last decade atomic force microscopy has been used to measure the mechanical stability of single proteins. These force spectroscopy experiments have shown that many water-soluble and membrane proteins unfold via one or more intermediates. Recently, Li and co-workers found a linear correlation between the unfolding force of the native state and the intermediate in fibronectin, which they suggested indicated the presence of a molecular memory or multiple unfolding pathways (1). Here, we apply two independent methods in combination with Monte Carlo simulations to analyze the unfolding of α-helices E and D of bacteriorhodopsin (BR). We show that correlation analysis of unfolding forces is very sensitive to errors in force calibration of the instrument. In contrast, a comparison of relative forces provides a robust measure for the stability of unfolding intermediates. The proposed approach detects three energetically different states of α-helices E and D in trimeric BR. These states are not observed for monomeric BR and indicate that substantial information is hidden in forced unfolding experiments of single proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Bacteriorhodopsin is a model system for membrane proteins. This seven transmembrane helical protein is embedded within a membrane structure called purple membrane. Its structural stability against mechanical stress was recently investigated by atomic force microscopy experiments, in which single proteins were extracted from the purple membrane. Here, we study this process by all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, in which single bacteriorhodopsin molecules were extracted and unfolded from an atomistic purple membrane model. In our simulations, key features from the experiments like force profiles and location of key residues that resist mechanical unfolding were reproduced. These key residues were seen to be stabilized by a dynamic network of intramolecular interactions. Further, the unfolding pathway was found to be velocity-dependent. Simulations in which the mechanical stress was released during unfolding revealed relaxation motions that allowed characterization of the nonequilibrium processes during fast extraction.  相似文献   

19.
Cations are known to mediate diverse interactions in nucleic acids duplexes but they are critical in the arrangement of four-stranded structures. Here, we use all-atom molecular dynamics simulations with explicit solvent to analyse the mechanical unfolding of representative intramolecular G-quadruplex structures: a parallel, a hybrid and an antiparallel DNA and a parallel RNA, in the presence of stabilising cations. We confirm the stability of these conformations in the presence of central ions and observe distortions from the tetrad topology in their absence. Force-induced unfolding dynamics is then investigated. We show that the unfolding events in the force-extension curves are concomitant to the loss of coordination between the central ions and the guanines of the G-quadruplex. We found lower ruptures forces for the parallel configuration with respect to the antiparallel one, while the behaviour of the force pattern of the parallel RNA appears similar to the parallel DNA. We anticipate that our results will be essential to interpret the fine structure rupture profiles in stretching assays at high resolution and will shed light on the mechanochemical activity of G-quadruplex-binding machinery.  相似文献   

20.
How stabilising non-native interactions influence protein folding energy landscapes is currently not well understood: such interactions could speed folding by reducing the conformational search to the native state, or could slow folding by increasing ruggedness. Here, we examine the influence of non-native interactions in the folding process of the bacterial immunity protein Im9, by exploiting our ability to manipulate the stability of the intermediate and rate-limiting transition state (TS) in the folding of this protein by minor alteration of its sequence or changes in solvent conditions. By analysing the properties of these species using Phi-value analysis, and exploration of the structural properties of the TS ensemble using molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate the importance of non-native interactions in immunity protein folding and demonstrate that the rate-limiting step involves partial reorganisation of these interactions as the TS ensemble is traversed. Moreover, we show that increasing the contribution to stability made by non-native interactions results in an increase in Phi-values of the TS ensemble without altering its structural properties or solvent-accessible surface area. The data suggest that the immunity proteins fold on multiple, but closely related, micropathways, resulting in a heterogeneous TS ensemble that responds subtly to mutation or changes in the solvent conditions. Thus, altering the relative strength of native and non-native interactions influences the search to the native state by restricting the pathways through the folding energy landscape.  相似文献   

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