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1.
The stability and (un)folding of the 19-residue peptide, SCVTLYQSWRYSQADNGCA, corresponding to the first beta-hairpin (residues 10 to 28) of the alpha-amylase inhibitor tendamistat (PDB entry 3AIT) has been studied by molecular dynamics simulations in explicit water under periodic boundary conditions at several temperatures (300 K, 360 K and 400 K), starting from various conformations for simulation lengths, ranging from 10 to 30 ns. Comparison of trajectories of the reduced and oxidized native peptides reveals the importance of the disulphide bridge closing the beta-hairpin in maintaining a proper turn conformation, thereby insuring a proper side-chain arrangement of the conserved turn residues. This allows rationalization of the conservation of those cysteine residues among the family of alpha-amylase inhibitors. High temperature simulations starting from widely different initial configurations (native beta-hairpin, alpha and left-handed helical and extended conformations) begin sampling similar regions of the conformational space within tens of nanoseconds, and both native and non-native beta-hairpin conformations are recovered. Transitions between conformational clusters are accompanied by an increase in energy fluctuations, which is consistent with the increase in heat capacity measured experimentally upon protein folding. The folding events observed in the various simulations support a model for beta-hairpin formation in which the turn is formed first, followed by hydrogen bond formation closing the hairpin, and subsequent stabilization by side-chain hydrophobic interactions.  相似文献   

2.
Experimental evidence and theoretical models both suggest that protein folding is initiated within specific fragments intermittently adopting conformations close to that found in the protein native structure. These folding initiation sites encompassing short portions of the protein are ideally suited for study in isolation by computational methods aimed at peering into the very early events of folding. We have used Molecular Dynamics (MD) technique to investigate the behavior of an isolated protein fragment formed by residues 85 to 102 of barnase that folds into a β hairpin in the protein native structure. Three independent MD simulations of 1.3 to 1.8 ns starting from unfolded conformations of the peptide portrayed with an all-atom model in water were carried out at gradually decreasing temperature. A detailed analysis of the conformational preferences adopted by this peptide in the course of the simulations is presented. Two of the unfolded peptide conformations fold into a hairpin characterized by native and a larger bulk of nonnative interactions. Both refolding simulations substantiate the close relationship between interstrand compactness and hydrogen bonding network involving backbone atoms. Persistent compactness witnessed by side-chain interactions always occurs concomitantly with the formation of backbone hydrogen bonds. No highly populated conformations generated in a third simulation starting from the remotest unfolded conformer relative to the native structure are observed. However, nonnative long-range and medium-range contacts with the aromatic moiety of Trp94 are spotted, which are in fair agreement with a former nuclear magnetic resonance study of a denaturing solution of an isolated barnase fragment encompassing the β hairpin. All this lends reason to believe that the 85–102 barnase fragment is a strong initiation site for folding. Proteins 29:212–227, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
The peptide TGAAKAVALVL from glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase adopts a helical conformation in the crystal structure and is a site for two hydrated helical segments, which are thought to be helical folding intermediates. Overlapping sequences of four to five residues from the peptide, sample both helical and strand conformations in known protein structures, which are dissimilar to glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase suggesting that the peptide may have a structural ambivalence. Molecular dynamics simulations of the peptide sequence performed for a total simulation time of 1.2 micros, starting from the various initial conformations using GROMOS96 force field under NVT conditions, show that the peptide samples a large number of conformational forms with transitions from alpha-helix to beta-hairpin and vice versa. The peptide, therefore, displays a structural ambivalence. The mechanism from alpha-helix to beta-hairpin transition and vice versa reveals that the compact bends and turns conformational forms mediate such conformational transitions. These compact structures including helices and hairpins have similar hydrophobic radius of gyration (Rgh) values suggesting that similar hydrophobic interactions govern these conformational forms. The distribution of conformational energies is Gaussian with helix sampling lowest energy followed by the hairpins and coil. The lowest potential energy of the full helix may enable the peptide to take up helical conformation in the crystal structure of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, even though the peptide has a preference for hairpin too. The relevance of folding and unfolding events observed in our simulations to hydrophobic collapse model of protein folding are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The role of the non-native beta-turn sequence (NPDG) in nucleating the folding of a beta-hairpin peptide derived from the N-terminus of ubiquitin, has been examined by NMR and CD spectroscopy. The NPDG sequence, while representing a common two-residue type I turn sequence in proteins, folds to give a G1-bulged type I turn in the context of a beta-hairpin peptide, to the exclusion of other possible conformations. The turn conformation results in misalignment of the two beta strands and a beta hairpin with non-native side chain interactions. A truncated 12-residue analogue of the hairpin, in which the majority of residues in the N-terminal beta strand have been deleted, shows some weak propensity to fold into a G-bulged type I turn conformation in the absence of interstrand stabilizing interactions. The NPDG turn sequence pays some of the entropic cost in initiating folding allowing interstrand interactions, which in this case arise from the non-native pairing of residue side chains, to stabilize a significant population of the folded state. Examination of the relative abundance of the Pro-Asp type I turn, with G in the +B1 position, vs. the type I G-bulged turn PXG, in a database of high resolution structures, reveals 48 instances of PXG bulged turns for which X = Asp is by far the most common residue with 20 occurrences. Strikingly, there are no examples of a type I PD turn with G at the +B1 position, in good agreement with our experimental observations that the PDG G-bulged turn is populated preferentially in solution.  相似文献   

5.
H Wang  S S Sung 《Biopolymers》1999,50(7):763-776
Folding of beta-hairpin structures of synthetic peptides has been simulated using the molecular dynamics method with a solvent-referenced potential. Two similar sequences, Ac-MQIFVKS(D)PGKTITLKV-NH(2) and Ac-MQIFVKS(L)PGKTITLKV-NH(2), derived from the N-terminal beta-hairpin of ubiquitin, were used to study the effects of turn residues in beta-hairpin folding. The simulations were carried out for 80 ns at 297 K. With extended initial conformation, the (D)P-containing peptide folded into a stable 2:2 beta-hairpin conformation with a type II' beta-turn at (D)PG. The overall beta-hairpin ratio, calculated by the DSSP algorithm, was 32.6%. With randomly generated initial conformations, the peptide also formed the stable 2:2 beta-hairpin conformation. The interactions among the side chains in the 2:2 beta-hairpin were almost identical to those in the native protein. These interactions reduced the solvation energy upon folding and stabilized the beta-hairpin conformation. Without the solvent effect, the peptide did not fold into stable beta-hairpin structures. The solvent effect is crucial for the formation of the beta-hairpin conformation. The effect of the temperature has also been studied. The (L)P-containing peptide did not fold into a stable beta-hairpin conformation and had a much lower beta-hairpin ratio (16.6%). The( L)P-containing peptide has similar favorable side-chain interactions, but the turn formed by (L)PG does not connect well with the right-handed twist of the beta-strands. For comparison, the isolated N-terminal peptide of ubiquitin, Ac-MQIFVKTLTGKTITLEV-NH(2), was also simulated and its beta-hairpin ratio was low, indicating that the beta-hairpin in the native structure is stabilized by the interaction with the protein environment. These simulation results agreed qualitatively with the available experimental findings.  相似文献   

6.
NMR studies of the folding and conformational properties of a beta-hairpin peptide, several peptide fragments of the hairpin, and sequence-modified analogues, have enabled the various contributions to beta-hairpin stability in water to be dissected. Temperature and pH-induced unfolding studies indicate that the folding-unfolding equilibrium approximates to a two-state model. The hairpin is highly resistant to denaturation and is still significantly folded in 7 M urea at 298 K. Thermodynamic analysis shows the hairpin to fold in water with a significant change in heat capacity, however, DeltaCp degrees in 7 M urea is reduced. V/Y-->A mutations on one strand of the hairpin reduce folding to <10 %, consistent with a hydrophobic stabilisation model. We show that in a truncated peptide (residues 6-16) lacking the hydrophobic residues on one beta-strand, the type I' Asn-Gly turn in the sequence SINGKK is significantly populated in water in the absence of interstrand hydrophobic contacts. Unrestrained molecular dynamics simulations of unfolding, using an explicit solvation model, show that the conformation of the NG turn persists for longer than the AG analogue, which has a much lower propensity for type I' turn formation from a data base analysis of preferred turns. The origin of the high stability of the Asn-Gly turn is not entirely clear; data base analysis of 66 NG turns, together with molecular dynamics simulations, reveals no participation of the Asn side-chain in turn-stabilising interactions with the peptide backbone. However, hydration analysis of the molecular dynamics simulations reveals a pocket of "high density" water bridging between the Asn side-chain and peptide main-chain that suggests solvent-mediated interactions may play an important role in modulating phi,psi propensities in the NG turn region.  相似文献   

7.
Yoda T  Sugita Y  Okamoto Y 《Proteins》2007,66(4):846-859
G-peptide is a 16-residue peptide of the C-terminal end of streptococcal protein G B1 domain, which is known to fold into a specific beta-hairpin within 6 micros. Here, we study molecular mechanism on the stability and folding of G-peptide by performing a multicanonical replica-exchange (MUCAREM) molecular dynamics simulation with explicit solvent. Unlike the preceding simulations of the same peptide, the simulation was started from an unfolded conformation without any experimental information on the native conformation. In the 278-ns trajectory, we observed three independent folding events. Thus MUCAREM can be estimated to accelerate the folding reaction more than 60 times than the conventional molecular dynamics simulations. The free-energy landscape of the peptide at room temperature shows that there are three essential subevents in the folding pathway to construct the native-like beta-hairpin conformation: (i) a hydrophobic collapse of the peptide occurs with the side-chain contacts between Tyr45 and Phe52, (ii) then, the native-like turn is formed accompanying with the hydrogen-bonded network around the turn region, and (iii) finally, the rest of the backbone hydrogen bonds are formed. A number of stable native hydrogen bonds are formed cooperatively during the second stage, suggesting the importance of the formation of the specific turn structure. This is also supported by the accumulation of the nonnative conformations only with the hydrophobic cluster around Tyr45 and Phe52. These simulation results are consistent with high phi-values of the turn region observed by experiment.  相似文献   

8.
Chen YR  Clark AC 《Biochemistry》2003,42(20):6310-6320
We have characterized the equilibrium and kinetic folding of a unique protein domain, caspase recruitment domain (CARD), of the RIP-like interacting CLARP kinase (RICK) (RICK-CARD), which adopts a alpha-helical Greek key fold. At equilibrium, the folding of RICK-CARD is well described by a two-state mechanism representing the native and unfolded ensembles. The protein is marginally stable, with a DeltaG(H)()2(O) of 3.0 +/- 0.15 kcal/mol and an m-value of 1.27 +/- 0.06 kcal mol(-1) M(-1) (30 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8, 1 mM DTT, 25 degrees C). While the m-value is constant, the protein stability decreases in the presence of moderate salt concentrations (below 200 mM) and then increases at higher salt concentrations. The results suggest that electrostatic interactions are stabilizing in the native protein, and the favorable Coulombic interactions are reduced at low ionic strength. Above 200 mM salt, the results are consistent with Hofmeister effects. The unfolding pathway of RICK-CARD is complex and contains at least three non-native conformations. The refolding pathway of RICK-CARD also is complex, and the data suggest that the unfolded protein folds via two intermediate conformations prior to reaching the native state. Overall, the data suggest the presence of kinetically trapped, or misfolded, species that are on-pathway both in refolding and in unfolding.  相似文献   

9.
Wei G  Shea JE 《Biophysical journal》2006,91(5):1638-1647
The free energy landscape for folding of the Alzheimer's amyloid-beta(25-35) peptide is explored using replica exchange molecular dynamics in both pure water and in HFIP/water cosolvent. This amphiphilic peptide is a natural by-product of the Alzheimer's amyloid-beta(1-40) peptide and retains the toxicity of its full-length counterpart as well as the ability to aggregate into beta-sheet-rich fibrils. Our simulations reveal that the peptide preferentially populates a helical structure in apolar organic solvent, while in pure water, the peptide adopts collapsed coil conformations and to a lesser extent beta-hairpin conformations. The beta-hairpin is characterized by a type II' beta-turn involving residues G29 and A30 and two short beta-strands involving residues N27, K28, I31, and I32. The hairpin is stabilized by backbone hydrogen-bonding interactions between residues K28 and I31; S26 and G33; and by side-chain-to-side-chain interactions between N27 and I32. Implications regarding the mechanism of aggregation of this peptide into fibrils and the role of the environment in modulating secondary structure are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
J Aqvist 《FEBS letters》1999,457(3):414-418
The reversible folding/unfolding of a short peptide in solution is studied by molecular dynamics simulations. The effects of long-range electrostatic interactions are examined and found to be important both for the equilibrium between folded and unfolded states and the dynamics of the folding process. The neglect of long-range electrostatics leads to an increased population of unfolded states and increased structural fluctuations. When such interactions are taken into account, the peptide unfolds and folds to the experimentally determined structure several times during a 25 ns trajectory, with approximately equal populations of folded and unfolded states in the neighborhood of its proposed melting temperature. The effect of using spherical boundary conditions rather than periodic ones does not appear to have any major effect on the folding dynamics.  相似文献   

11.
The conformational transition states of a beta-hairpin peptide in explicit water were identified from the free energy landscapes obtained from the multicanonical ensemble, using an enhanced conformational sampling calculation. The beta-hairpin conformations were significant at 300 K in the landscape, and the typical nuclear Overhauser effect signals were reproduced, consistent with the previously reported experiment. In contrast, the disordered conformations were predominant at higher temperatures. Among the stable conformations at 300 K, there were several free energy barriers, which were not visible in the landscapes formed with the conventional parameters. We identified the transition states around the saddle points along the putative folding and unfolding paths between the beta-hairpin and the disordered conformations in the landscape. The characteristic features of these transition states are the predominant hydrophobic contacts and the several hydrogen bonds among the side-chains, as well as some of the backbone hydrogen bonds. The unfolding simulations at high temperatures, 400 K and 500 K, and their principal component analyses also provided estimates for the transition state conformations, which agreed well with those at 400 K and 500 K deduced from the current free energy landscapes at 400 K and 500 K, respectively. However, the transition states at high temperatures were much more widely distributed on the landscape than those at 300 K, and their conformations were different.  相似文献   

12.
Chen C  Xiao Y 《Physical biology》2006,3(3):161-171
Computer simulations of beta-hairpin folding are relatively difficult, especially those based on the explicit water model. This greatly limits the complete analysis and understanding of their folding mechanisms. In this paper, we use the generalized Born/solvent accessible implicit solvent model to simulate the folding processes of a nine-residue beta-hairpin. We find that the beta-hairpin can fold into its native structure very easily, even using the traditional molecular dynamics method. This allows us to extract 21 complete folding events and investigate the folding process sufficiently. Our results show that there exist four most stable states on the free energy landscape of the short peptide, one native state and three intermediates. We find that two of the non-native stable states have almost the same potential energy as the native state but with lower entropy. This suggests that the native state can be stabilized entropically. Furthermore, we find that the folding processes of this peptide have common features: to fold into its native state, the peptide undergoes a continuous collapsing-extending-recollapsing process to adjust the positions of the side chains in order to form the native middle inter-strand hydrogen bonds. The formations of these bonds are the key step of the folding process. Once these bonds are formed, the peptide can fold into the native state quickly.  相似文献   

13.
Wei G  Mousseau N  Derreumaux P 《Proteins》2004,56(3):464-474
The determination of the folding mechanisms of proteins is critical to understand the topological change that can propagate Alzheimer and Creutzfeld-Jakobs diseases, among others. The computational community has paid considerable attention to this problem; however, the associated time scale, typically on the order of milliseconds or more, represents a formidable challenge. Ab initio protein folding from long molecular dynamics simulations or ensemble dynamics is not feasible with ordinary computing facilities and new techniques must be introduced. Here we present a detailed study of the folding of a 16-residue beta-hairpin, described by a generic energy model and using the activation-relaxation technique. From a total of 90 trajectories at 300 K, three folding pathways emerge. All involve a simultaneous optimization of the complete hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding interactions. The first two pathways follow closely those observed by previous theoretical studies (folding starting at the turn or by interactions between the termini). The third pathway, never observed by previous all-atom folding, unfolding, and equilibrium simulations, can be described as a reptation move of one strand of the beta-sheet with respect to the other. This reptation move indicates that non-native interactions can play a dominant role in the folding of secondary structures. Furthermore, such a mechanism mediated by non-native hydrogen bonds is not available for study by unfolding and Gō model simulations. The exact folding path followed by a given beta-hairpin is likely to be influenced by its sequence and the solvent conditions. Taken together, these results point to a more complex folding picture than expected for a simple beta-hairpin.  相似文献   

14.
Caspase recruitment domains (CARDs) are members of the death domain superfamily and contain six antiparallel helices in an alpha-helical Greek key topology. We have examined the equilibrium and kinetic folding of the CARD of Apaf-1 (apoptotic protease activating factor 1), which consists of 97 amino acid residues, at pH 6 and pH 8. The results showed that an apparent two state equilibrium mechanism is not adequate to describe the folding of Apaf-1 CARD at either pH, suggesting the presence of intermediates in equilibrium unfolding. Interestingly, the results showed that the secondary structure is less stable than the tertiary structure, based on the transition mid-points for unfolding. Single mixing and sequential mixing stopped-flow studies showed that Apaf-1 CARD folds and unfolds rapidly and suggest a folding mechanism that contains parallel channels with two unfolded conformations folding to the native conformation. Kinetic simulations show that a slow folding phase is described by a third conformation in the unfolded ensemble that interconverts with one or both unfolded species. Overall, the native ensemble is formed rapidly upon refolding. This is in contrast to other CARDs in which folding appears to be dominated by formation of kinetic traps.  相似文献   

15.
Wang H  Varady J  Ng L  Sung SS 《Proteins》1999,37(3):325-333
Molecular dynamics simulations of beta-hairpin folding have been carried out with a solvent-referenced potential at 274 K. The model peptide V4DPGV4 formed stable beta-hairpin conformations and the beta-hairpin ratio calculated by the DSSP algorithm was about 56% in the 50-ns simulation. Folding into beta-hairpin conformations is independent of the initial conformations. The simulations provided insights into the folding mechanism. The hydrogen bond often formed in a beta-turn first, and then propagated by forming more hydrogen bonds along the strands. Unfolding and refolding occurred repeatedly during the simulations. Both the hydrogen bonding and the hydrophobic interaction played important roles in forming the ordered structure. Without the hydrophobic effect, stable beta-hairpin conformations did not form in the simulations. With the same energy functions, the alanine-based peptide (AAQAA)3Y folded into helical conformations, in agreement with experiments. Folding into an alpha-helix or a beta-hairpin is amino acid sequence-dependent.  相似文献   

16.
Daidone I  Amadei A  Di Nola A 《Proteins》2005,59(3):510-518
The folding of the amyloidogenic H1 peptide MKHMAGAAAAGAVV taken from the syrian hamster prion protein is explored in explicit aqueous solution at 300 K using long time scale all-atom molecular dynamics simulations for a total simulation time of 1.1 mus. The system, initially modeled as an alpha-helix, preferentially adopts a beta-hairpin structure and several unfolding/refolding events are observed, yielding a very short average beta-hairpin folding time of approximately 200 ns. The long time scale accessed by our simulations and the reversibility of the folding allow to properly explore the configurational space of the peptide in solution. The free energy profile, as a function of the principal components (essential eigenvectors) of motion, describing the main conformational transitions, shows the characteristic features of a funneled landscape, with a downhill surface toward the beta-hairpin folded basin. However, the analysis of the peptide thermodynamic stability, reveals that the beta-hairpin in solution is rather unstable. These results are in good agreement with several experimental evidences, according to which the isolated H1 peptide adopts very rapidly in water beta-sheet structure, leading to amyloid fibril precipitates [Nguyen et al., Biochemistry 1995;34:4186-4192; Inouye et al., J Struct Biol 1998;122:247-255]. Moreover, in this article we also characterize the diffusion behavior in conformational space, investigating its relations with folding/unfolding conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Over the last 50 years, significant progress has been made toward understanding how small single-domain proteins fold. However, very little is known about folding mechanisms of medium and large multidomain proteins that predominate the proteomes of all forms of life. Large proteins frequently fold cotranslationally and/or require chaperones. Firefly (Photinus pyralis) luciferase (Luciferase, 550 residues) has been a model of a cotranslationally folding protein whose extremely slow refolding (approximately days) is catalyzed by chaperones. However, the mechanism by which Luciferase misfolds and how chaperones assist Luciferase refolding remains unknown. Here we combine single-molecule force spectroscopy (atomic force microscopy (AFM)/single-molecule force spectroscopy) with steered molecular dynamic computer simulations to unravel the mechanism of chaperone-assisted Luciferase refolding. Our AFM and steered molecular dynamic results show that partially unfolded Luciferase, with the N-terminal domain remaining folded, can refold robustly without chaperones. Complete unfolding causes Luciferase to get trapped in very stable non-native configurations involving interactions between N- and C-terminal residues. However, chaperones allow the completely unfolded Luciferase to refold quickly in AFM experiments, strongly suggesting that chaperones are able to sequester non-natively contacting residues. More generally, we suggest that many chaperones, rather than actively promoting the folding, mimic the ribosomal exit tunnel and physically separate protein domains, allowing them to fold in a cotranslational-like sequential process.  相似文献   

18.
Prion proteins become pathogenic through misfolding. Here, we characterize the folding of a peptide consisting of residues 109–122 of the Syrian hamster prion protein (the H1 peptide) and of a more amyloidogenic A117V point mutant that leads in humans to an inheritable form of the Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker syndrome. Atomistic molecular dynamics simulations are performed for 2.5 μs. Both peptides lose their α-helical starting conformations and assume a β-hairpin that is structurally similar in both systems. In each simulation several unfolding/refolding events occur, leading to convergence of the thermodynamics of the conformational states to within 1 kJ/mol. The similar stability of the β-hairpin relative to the unfolded state is observed in the two peptides. However, substantial differences are found between the two unfolded states. A local minimum is found within the free energy unfolded basin of the A117V mutant populated by misfolded collapsed conformations of comparable stability to the β-hairpin state, consistent with increased amyloidogenicity. This population, in which V117 stabilizes a hydrophobic core, is absent in the wild-type peptide. These results are supported by simulations of oligomers showing a slightly higher stability of the associated structures and a lower barrier to association for the mutated peptide. Hence, a single point mutation carrying only two additional methyl groups is here shown to be responsible for rather dramatic differences of structuring within the unfolded (misfolded) state.  相似文献   

19.
Plasticins (23 long-residue glycine-leucine-rich dermaseptin-related peptides produced by the skin of South American hylids) have very similar amino acid sequences, hydrophobicities, and amphipathicities, but differ in their membrane-damaging properties and structurations (i.e. destabilized helix states, beta-hairpin, beta-sheet, and disordered states) at anionic and zwitterionic membrane interfaces. Structural malleability of plasticins in aqueous solutions together with parameters that may govern their ability to fold within beta-hairpin like structures were analyzed through circular dichroism and FTIR spectroscopic studies completed by molecular dynamics simulations in polar mimetic media. The goal of this study was to probe to which extent pre-existent peptide conformations, i.e. intrinsic "conformational landscape", may be responsible for variability in bioactive conformation and antimicrobial/hemolytic mechanisms of action of these peptides in relation with their various membrane disturbing properties. All plasticins present a turn region that does not always result in folding into a beta-hairpin shaped conformation. Residue at position 8 plays a major role in initiating the folding, while position 12 is not critical. Conformational stability has no major impact on antimicrobial efficacy. However, preformed beta-hairpin in solution may act as a conformational lock that prevents switch to alpha-helical structure. This lock lowers the antimicrobial efficiency and explains subtle differences in potencies of the most active antimicrobial plasticins.  相似文献   

20.
Prion proteins become pathogenic through misfolding. Here, we characterize the folding of a peptide consisting of residues 109–122 of the Syrian hamster prion protein (the H1 peptide) and of a more amyloidogenic A117V point mutant that leads in humans to an inheritable form of the Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker syndrome. Atomistic molecular dynamics simulations are performed for 2.5 μs. Both peptides lose their α-helical starting conformations and assume a β-hairpin that is structurally similar in both systems. In each simulation several unfolding/refolding events occur, leading to convergence of the thermodynamics of the conformational states to within 1 kJ/mol. The similar stability of the β-hairpin relative to the unfolded state is observed in the two peptides. However, substantial differences are found between the two unfolded states. A local minimum is found within the free energy unfolded basin of the A117V mutant populated by misfolded collapsed conformations of comparable stability to the β-hairpin state, consistent with increased amyloidogenicity. This population, in which V117 stabilizes a hydrophobic core, is absent in the wild-type peptide. These results are supported by simulations of oligomers showing a slightly higher stability of the associated structures and a lower barrier to association for the mutated peptide. Hence, a single point mutation carrying only two additional methyl groups is here shown to be responsible for rather dramatic differences of structuring within the unfolded (misfolded) state.  相似文献   

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