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1.
This discussion, prepared for the Protein Society's symposium honoring the 100th anniversary of Kaj Linderstrøm-Lang, shows how hydrogen exchange approaches initially conceived and implemented by Lang and his colleagues some 50 years ago are contributing to current progress in structural biology. Examples are chosen from the active protein folding field. Hydrogen exchange methods now make it possible to define the structure of protein folding intermediates in various contexts: as tenuous molten globule forms at equilibrium under destabilizing conditions, in kinetic intermediates that exist for less than one second, and as infinitesimally populated excited state forms under native conditions. More generally, similar methods now find broad application in studies of protein structure, energetics, and interactions. This article considers the rise of these capabilities from their inception at the Carlsberg Labs to their contemporary role as a significant tool of modern structural biology.  相似文献   

2.
The measurement of amino acid-resolved hydrogen exchange (HX) has provided the most detailed information so far available on the structure and properties of protein folding intermediates. Direct HX measurements can define the structure of tenuous molten globule forms that are generally inaccessible to the usual crystallographic and NMR methods (C. Redfield review in this issue). HX pulse labeling methods can specify the structure, stability and kinetics of folding intermediates that exist for less than 1 s during kinetic folding. Native state HX methods can detect and characterize folding intermediates that exist as infinitesimally populated high energy excited state forms under native conditions. The results obtained in these ways suggest principles that appear to explain the properties of partially folded intermediates and how they are organized into folding pathways. The application of these methods is detailed here.  相似文献   

3.
The folding pathway of the third domain of PDZ from the synaptic protein PSD-95 was characterized using kinetic and equilibrium methods by monitoring the fluorescence signal from a Trp residue that is incorporated at a near-surface position. Kinetic folding of this domain showed multiple exponential phases, whereas unfolding showed a single exponential phase. The slow kinetic phases were attributed to isomerization of proline residues, since there are five proline residues in this domain. We found that the logarithms of the rate constants for the fast phase of folding and unfolding are linearly dependent on the concentrations of denaturant. The unfolding free energy derived from these rate constants at zero denaturant was close to the value measured using the equilibrium method, suggesting the absence of detectable sub-millisecond folding intermediates. However, native-state hydrogen exchange experiments detected a partially unfolded intermediate under native conditions. It was further confirmed by a protein engineering study. These data suggest that a hidden intermediate exists after the rate-limiting step in the folding of the third domain of PDZ.  相似文献   

4.
Wang T  Lau WL  DeGrado WF  Gai F 《Biophysical journal》2005,89(6):4180-4187
Partially folded intermediates have been frequently observed in equilibrium and kinetic protein folding studies. However, folding intermediates that exist at the native side of the rate-limiting step are rather difficult to study because they often evade detection by conventional folding kinetic methods. Here, we demonstrated that a laser-induced temperature-jump method can potentially be used to identify the existence of such post-transition or hidden intermediates. Specifically, we studied two cross-linked variants of GCN4-p1 coiled-coil. The GCN4 leucine zipper has been studied extensively and most of these studies have regarded it as a two-state folder. Our static circular dichroism and infrared data also indicate that the thermal unfolding of these two monomeric coiled-coils can be adequately described by an apparent two-state model. However, their temperature-jump-induced relaxation kinetics exhibit non-monoexponential behavior, dependent upon sequence and temperature. Taken together, our results support a folding mechanism wherein at least one folding intermediate populates behind the main rate-limiting step.  相似文献   

5.
Proteins in cells fold via a number of intermediates. These intermediates are quite important as they guide the protein to attain its unique native conformation. To solve the immensely difficult problem of protein folding, it is necessary to characterize intermediates which will unravel the mystery of the steps involved in the proper folding of proteins. Cytochromes-c (cyts-c) have played an important role in studies of the earliest events and intermediates in protein folding. They have always been considered as model proteins for protein folding studies due to their intrinsic properties that can be measured by multiple probes. A large number of different solvent conditions have been employed to obtain equilibrium intermediates of cyts-c. These intermediates show structural heterogeneity which is mainly due to the different solvent conditions used to induce them. In this review we present results of conformational and thermodynamic characterization of equilibrium intermediates (molten globules and pre-molten globules) of the mammalian cyts-c under different solvent conditions.  相似文献   

6.
A number of residues in globins family are well conserved but are not directly involved in the primary oxygen-carrying function of these proteins. A possible role for these conserved, non-functional residues has been suggested in promoting a rapid and correct folding process to the native tertiary structure. To test this hypothesis, we have studied pH-induced equilibrium unfolding of mutant apomyoglobins with substitutions of the conserved residues Trp14 and Met131, which are not involved in the function of myoglobin, by various amino acids. This allowed estimating their impact on the stability of various conformational states of the proteins and selecting conditions for a folding kinetics study. The results obtained from circular dichroism, tryptophan fluorescence, and differential scanning microcalorimetry for these mutant proteins were compared with those for the wild type protein and for a mutant with the non-conserved Val17 substituted by Ala. In the native folded state, all of the mutant apoproteins have a compact globular structure, but are destabilized in comparison to the wild type protein. The pH-induced denaturation of the mutant proteins occurs through the formation of a molten globule-like intermediate similar to that of the wild type protein. Thermodynamic parameters for all of the proteins were calculated using the three state model. Stability of equilibrium intermediates at pH ~4.0 was shown to be slightly affected by the mutations. Thus, all of the above substitutions influence the stability of the native state of these proteins. The cooperativity of conformational transitions and the exposed to solvent protein surface were also changed, but not for the substitution at Val17.  相似文献   

7.
Protein intermediates in equilibrium with native states may play important roles in protein dynamics but, in cases, can initiate harmful aggregation events. Investigating equilibrium protein intermediates is thus important for understanding protein behaviour (useful or pernicious) but it is hampered by difficulties in gathering structural information. We show here that the phi-analysis techniques developed to investigate transition states of protein folding can be extended to determine low-resolution three-dimensional structures of protein equilibrium intermediates. The analysis proposed is based solely on equilibrium data and is illustrated by determination of the structure of the apoflavodoxin thermal unfolding intermediate. In this conformation, a large part of the protein remains close to natively folded, but a 40 residue region is clearly unfolded. This structure is fully consistent with the NMR data gathered on an apoflavodoxin mutant designed specifically to stabilise the intermediate. The structure shows that the folded region of the intermediate is much larger than the proton slow-exchange core at 25 degrees C. It also reveals that the unfolded region is made of elements whose packing surface is more polar than average. In addition, it constitutes a useful guide to rationally stabilise the native state relative to the intermediate state, a far from trivial task.  相似文献   

8.
The oxidative folding and reductive unfolding pathways of leech carboxypeptidase inhibitor (LCI; four disulfides) have been characterized in this work by structural and kinetic analysis of the acid-trapped folding intermediates. The oxidative folding of reduced and denatured LCI proceeds rapidly through a sequential flow of 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-disulfide (scrambled) species to reach the native form. Folding intermediates of LCI comprise two predominant 3-disulfide species (designated as III-A and III-B) and a heterogeneous population of scrambled isomers that consecutively accumulate along the folding reaction. Our study reveals that forms III-A and III-B exclusively contain native disulfide bonds and correspond to stable and partially structured species that interconvert, reaching an equilibrium prior to the formation of the scrambled isomers. Given that these intermediates act as kinetic traps during the oxidative folding, their accumulation is prevented when they are destabilized, thus leading to a significant acceleration of the folding kinetics. III-A and III-B forms appear to have both native disulfides bonds and free thiols similarly protected from the solvent; major structural rearrangements through the formation of scrambled isomers are required to render native LCI. The reductive unfolding pathway of LCI undergoes an apparent all-or-none mechanism, although low amounts of intermediates III-A and III-B can be detected, suggesting differences in protection against reduction among the disulfide bonds. The characterization of III-A and III-B forms shows that the former intermediate structurally and functionally resembles native LCI, whereas the III-B form bears more resemblance to scrambled isomers.  相似文献   

9.
The equilibrium denaturation of human growth hormone (hGH) derived from heterologous gene expression in Escherichia coli was studied. Denaturation was measured by ultraviolet absorbance, intrinsic fluorescence, far ultraviolet circular dichroism, and size exclusion chromatography. The denaturation transitions obtained from each method of detection were coincident, indicating a two-state denaturation mechanism. The denaturation transitions were independent of the concentration of protein. The Gibbs free energy of unfolding is 14.5 +/- 1 kcal/mol. Human growth hormone contains two disulfide bridges between residues 53-165 (large loop) and 182-189 (small loop). The small loop was selectively reduced and cysteines alkylated with iodoacetic acid or iodoacetamide. The tetra-S-carbamidomethylated and tetra-S-carboxymethylated derivatives were also prepared. All S-alkylated hGH forms were indistinguishable from the native conformations in the absence of denaturant by far ultraviolet circular dichroism. The circular dichroism-detected equilibrium denaturation of each derivative was determined and the Gibbs free energy of unfolding of the tetra-S-modified forms was 5.3 +/- 0.5 kcal/mol and of the di-S-alkylated derivatives was 11.2 +/- 0.8 kcal/mol. These results for hGH are different than previously obtained results for bovine, ovine, and rat growth hormones. Stable equilibrium intermediates have been identified for these non-human species of growth hormone. The stable intermediates observed in the denaturation of reduced, alkylated hGH or nonhunam growth hormones are similar and characterized as compact, helical, lacking native-like tertiary structure, and having a tendency to aggregate. The apparent absence of intermediates in the folding of oxidized hGH is due to the relative instability of intermediates compared with their native structures. The hGH conformation is at least 5 kcal/mol more stable than the growth hormones from other species. Reduction and alkylation of the disulfide bridges of hGH diminish the stability differences between the native and intermediate states, such that the denaturation behavior is similar to the nonhuman growth hormones with well-populated intermediates. Most proteins do not demonstrate equilibrium folding intermediates presumably because intermediates are only marginally stable in conditions that disrupt the native state. The folding results with hGH and alkylated hGH substantiate this.  相似文献   

10.
In this study, the equivalence of the kinetic mechanisms of the formation of urea-induced kinetic folding intermediates and non-native equilibrium states was investigated in apomyoglobin. Despite having similar structural properties, equilibrium and kinetic intermediates accumulate under different conditions and via different mechanisms, and it remains unknown whether their formation involves shared or distinct kinetic mechanisms. To investigate the potential mechanisms of formation, the refolding and unfolding kinetics of horse apomyoglobin were measured by continuous- and stopped-flow fluorescence over a time range from approximately 100 μs to 10 s, along with equilibrium unfolding transitions, as a function of urea concentration at pH 6.0 and 8°C. The formation of a kinetic intermediate was observed over a wider range of urea concentrations (0–2.2 M) than the formation of the native state (0–1.6 M). Additionally, the kinetic intermediate remained populated as the predominant equilibrium state under conditions where the native and unfolded states were unstable (at ~0.7–2 M urea). A continuous shift from the kinetic to the equilibrium intermediate was observed as urea concentrations increased from 0 M to ~2 M, which indicates that these states share a common kinetic folding mechanism. This finding supports the conclusion that these intermediates are equivalent. Our results in turn suggest that the regions of the protein that resist denaturant perturbations form during the earlier stages of folding, which further supports the structural equivalence of transient and equilibrium intermediates. An additional folding intermediate accumulated within ~140 μs of refolding and an unfolding intermediate accumulated in <1 ms of unfolding. Finally, by using quantitative modeling, we showed that a five-state sequential scheme appropriately describes the folding mechanism of horse apomyoglobin.  相似文献   

11.
Although the folding of alpha-helical repeat proteins has been well characterized, much less is known about the folding of repeat proteins containing beta-sheets. Here we investigate the folding thermodynamics and kinetics of the leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain of Internalin B (InlB), an extracellular virulence factor from the bacterium Lysteria monocytogenes. This domain contains seven tandem leucine-rich repeats, of which each contribute a single beta-strand that forms a continuous beta-sheet with neighboring repeats, and an N-terminal alpha-helical capping motif. Despite its modular structure, InlB folds in an equilibrium two-state manner, as reflected by the identical thermodynamic parameters obtained by monitoring its sigmoidal urea-induced unfolding transition by different spectroscopic probes. Although equilibrium two-state folding is common in alpha-helical repeat proteins, to date, InlB is the only beta-sheet-containing repeat protein for which this behavior is observed. Surprisingly, unlike other repeat proteins exhibiting equilibrium two-state folding, InlB also folds by a simple two-state kinetic mechanism lacking intermediates, aside from the effects of prolyl isomerization on the denatured state. However, like other repeat proteins, InlB also folds significantly more slowly than expected from contact order. When plotted against urea, the rate constants for the fast refolding and single unfolding phases constitute a linear chevron that, when fitted with a kinetic two-state model, yields thermodynamic parameters matching those observed for equilibrium folding. Based on these kinetic parameters, the transition state is estimated to comprise 40% of the total surface area buried upon folding, indicating that a large fraction of the native contacts are formed in the rate-limiting step to folding.  相似文献   

12.
Protein folding and misfolding: mechanism and principles   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Two fundamentally different views of how proteins fold are now being debated. Do proteins fold through multiple unpredictable routes directed only by the energetically downhill nature of the folding landscape or do they fold through specific intermediates in a defined pathway that systematically puts predetermined pieces of the target native protein into place? It has now become possible to determine the structure of protein folding intermediates, evaluate their equilibrium and kinetic parameters, and establish their pathway relationships. Results obtained for many proteins have serendipitously revealed a new dimension of protein structure. Cooperative structural units of the native protein, called foldons, unfold and refold repeatedly even under native conditions. Much evidence obtained by hydrogen exchange and other methods now indicates that cooperative foldon units and not individual amino acids account for the unit steps in protein folding pathways. The formation of foldons and their ordered pathway assembly systematically puts native-like foldon building blocks into place, guided by a sequential stabilization mechanism in which prior native-like structure templates the formation of incoming foldons with complementary structure. Thus the same propensities and interactions that specify the final native state, encoded in the amino-acid sequence of every protein, determine the pathway for getting there. Experimental observations that have been interpreted differently, in terms of multiple independent pathways, appear to be due to chance misfolding errors that cause different population fractions to block at different pathway points, populate different pathway intermediates, and fold at different rates. This paper summarizes the experimental basis for these three determining principles and their consequences. Cooperative native-like foldon units and the sequential stabilization process together generate predetermined stepwise pathways. Optional misfolding errors are responsible for 3-state and heterogeneous kinetic folding.  相似文献   

13.
The study of intermediates in the protein folding pathway provides a wealth of information about the energy landscape. The intermediates also frequently initiate pathogenic fibril formations. While observing the intermediates is difficult due to their transient nature, extreme conditions can partially unfold the proteins and provide a glimpse of the intermediate states. Here, we observe the high resolution structure of a hydrophobic core mutant of Ubiquitin at an extreme acidic pH by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. In the structure, the native secondary and tertiary structure is conserved for a major part of the protein. However, a long loop between the beta strands β3 and β5 is partially unfolded. The altered structure is supported by fluorescence data and the difference in free energies between the native state and the intermediate is reflected in the denaturant induced melting curves. The unfolded region includes amino acids that are critical for interaction with cofactors as well as for assembly of poly‐Ubiquitin chains. The structure at acidic pH resembles a late folding intermediate of Ubiquitin and indicates that upon stabilization of the protein's core, the long loop converges on the core in the final step of the folding process.  相似文献   

14.
The folding of lysozyme and of alpha-lactalbumin exhibits vastly different kinetics and pathways. Existing evidence indicates that folding intermediates of alphaLA form a well-populated equilibrium molten globule state that is absent in the case of hen lysozyme. We demonstrate here such divergent folding mechanisms of lysozyme and alphaLA using the technique of disulfide scrambling. Two extensively unfolded homologous isomers (beads-form) of lysozyme (Cys6-Cys30, Cys64-Cys76, Cys80-Cys94, Cys115-Cys127) and alphaLA (Cys6-Cys28, Cys61-Cys73, Cys77-Cys91, Cys111-Cys120) were allowed to refold in parallel to form the native protein. Folding kinetics was measured by the recovery of the native structure. Folding intermediates, which illustrate the folding pathway, were trapped by quenching disulfide shuffling and were analyzed by reversed-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography. The results revealed that under identical folding conditions, the folding rate of lysozyme is about 30-fold faster than that of alphaLA. Folding intermediates of lysozyme are far less heterogeneous and sparsely populated than those of alphaLA. Numerous predominant on-pathway and off-pathway intermediates observed along the folding pathway of alphaLA are conspicuously absent in the case of lysozyme. The difference is most striking under fast folding conditions performed in the presence of protein disulfide isomerase. Under these conditions, folding of lysozyme undergoes a near two-state mechanism without accumulation of stable folding intermediates.  相似文献   

15.
Extensive measurements and analysis of thermodynamic stability and kinetics of urea-induced unfolding and folding of hisactophilin are reported for 5-50 degrees C, at pH 6.7. Under these conditions hisactophilin has moderate thermodynamic stability, and equilibrium and kinetic data are well fit by a two-state transition between the native and the denatured states. Equilibrium and kinetic m values decrease with increasing temperature, and decrease with increasing denaturant concentration. The betaF values at different temperatures and urea concentrations are quite constant, however, at about 0.7. This suggests that the transition state for hisactophilin unfolding is native-like and changes little with changing solution conditions, consistent with a narrow free energy profile for the transition state. The activation enthalpy and entropy of unfolding are unusually low for hisactophilin, as is also the case for the corresponding equilibrium parameters. Conventional Arrhenius and Eyring plots for both folding and unfolding are markedly non-linear, but these plots become linear for constant DeltaG/T contours. The Gibbs free energy changes for structural changes in hisactophilin have a non-linear denaturant dependence that is comparable to non-linearities observed for many other proteins. These non-linearities can be fit for many proteins using a variation of the Tanford model, incorporating empirical quadratic denaturant dependencies for Gibbs free energies of transfer of amino acid constituents from water to urea, and changes in fractional solvent accessible surface area of protein constituents based on the known protein structures. Noteworthy exceptions that are not well fit include amyloidogenic proteins and large proteins, which may form intermediates. The model is easily implemented and should be widely applicable to analysis of urea-induced structural transitions in proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Proteins frequently fold via folding intermediates that correspond to local minima on the conformational energy landscape. Probing the structure of the partially unfolded forms in equilibrium under native conditions can provide insight into the properties of folding intermediates. To elucidate the structures of folding intermediates of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), we investigated transient partial unfolding of DHFR under native conditions. We probed the structure of a high‐energy conformation susceptible to proteolysis (cleavable form) using native‐state proteolysis. The free energy for unfolding to the cleavable form is clearly less than that for global unfolding. The dependence of the free energy on urea concentration (m‐value) also confirmed that the cleavable form is a partially unfolded form. By assessing the effect of mutations on the stability of the partially unfolded form, we found that native contacts in a hydrophobic cluster formed by the F‐G and Met‐20 loops on one face of the central β‐sheet are mostly lost in the partially unfolded form. Also, the folded region of the partially unfolded form is likely to have some degree of structural heterogeneity. The structure of the partially unfolded form is fully consistent with spectroscopic properties of the near‐native kinetic intermediate observed in previous folding studies of DHFR. The findings suggest that the last step of the folding of DHFR involves organization in the structure of two large loops, the F‐G and Met‐20 loops, which is coupled with compaction of the rest of the protein.  相似文献   

17.
Unfolded ribonuclease (RNase) from porcine pancreas consists of a mixture of fast and slow-refolding species. The equilibrium distribution of these species differs strongly from other homologous RNases, because an additional proline residue is present at position 115 of the porcine protein. The major slow-folding species of porcine RNase contains incorrect proline isomers at Pro93 and at Pro114-Pro115. Both positions are presumably part of beta-turn structures in the native protein, as deduced from the structure of the homologous bovine RNase A. The folding kinetics of these molecules depend strongly on the conditions used. Under unfavorable conditions (near the unfolding transition), refolding is virtually blocked by the presence of the incorrect proline peptide bonds and partially folded intermediates with incorrect isomers could not be detected. As a consequence, folding is very slow under such conditions and the re-isomerization of Pro114-Pro115 is the first and rate-limiting step of folding. Under strongly native conditions (such as in the presence of ammonium sulfate), refolding is much faster. A largely folded intermediate accumulates with the turns around Pro93 and Pro114-Pro115 still in the non-native conformation. These results suggest that incorrect proline isomers strongly influence protein folding and that, under favorable conditions, the polypeptide chain can fold with two beta-turns locked into a non-native conformation. We conclude, therefore, that early formation of correct turn structure is not necessarily required for protein folding. However, the presence of incorrect turns, locked-in by non-native proline isomers, strongly decreases the rate of refolding. Alternative pathways of folding exist. The choice of pathway depends on the number and distribution of incorrect proline isomers and on the folding conditions.  相似文献   

18.
Folding of the 123 amino acid residue Greek key protein apo-pseudo azurin from Thiosphaera pantotropha has been examined using stopped-flow circular dichroism in 0.5 M Na2SO4 at pH 7.0 and 15 degrees C. The data show that the protein folds from the unfolded state with all eight proline residues in their native isomers (seven trans and one cis) to an intermediate within the dead-time of the stopped-flow mixing (50 ms). The urea dependence of the rates of folding and unfolding of the protein were also determined. The ratio of the folding rate to the unfolding rate (extrapolated into water) is several orders of magnitude too small to account for the equilibrium stability of the protein, consistent with the population of an intermediate. Despite this, the logarithm of the rate of folding versus denaturant concentration is linear. These data can be rationalised by the population of an intermediate under all refolding conditions. Accordingly, kinetic and equilibrium measurements were combined to fit the chevron plot to an on-pathway model (U <==> I <==> N). The fit shows that apo-pseudoazurin rapidly forms a compact species that is stabilised by 25 kJ/mol before folding to the native state at a rate of 2 s-1. Although the data can also be fitted to an off-pathway model (I <==> U <==> N), the resulting kinetic parameters indicate that the protein would have to fold to the native state at a rate of 86,000 s-1 (a time constant of only 12 microseconds). Similarly, models in which this intermediate is bypassed also lead to unreasonably fast refolding rates. Thus, the intermediate populated during the refolding of apo-pseudoazurin appears to be obligate and on the folding pathway. We suggest, based on this study and others, that some intermediates play a critical role in limiting the search to the native state.  相似文献   

19.
When proteins fold in vivo, the intermediates that exist transiently on their folding pathways are exposed to the potential interactions with a plethora of metabolites within the cell. However, these potential interactions are commonly ignored. Here, we report a case in which a ubiquitous metabolite interacts selectively with a nonnative conformation of a protein and facilitates protein folding and unfolding process. From our previous proteomics study, we have discovered that Escherichia coli glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), which is not known to bind ATP under native conditions, is apparently destabilized in the presence of a physiological concentration of ATP. To decipher the origin of this surprising effect, we investigated the thermodynamics and kinetics of folding and unfolding of GAPDH in the presence of ATP. Equilibrium unfolding of the protein in urea showed that a partially unfolded equilibrium intermediate accumulates in the presence of ATP. This intermediate has a quaternary structure distinct from the native protein. Also, ATP significantly accelerates the unfolding of GAPDH by selectively stabilizing a transition state that is distinct from the native state of the protein. Moreover, ATP also significantly accelerates the folding of GAPDH. These results demonstrate that ATP interacts specifically with a partially unfolded form of GAPDH and affects the kinetics of folding and unfolding of this protein. This unusual effect of ATP on the folding of GAPDH implies that endogenous metabolites may facilitate protein folding in vivo by interacting with partially unfolded intermediates.  相似文献   

20.
The folding mechanism of cellular retinoic acid binding protein I (CRABP I), cellular retinol binding protein II (CRBP II), and intestinal fatty acid binding protein (IFABP) were investigated to determine if proteins with similar native structures have similar folding mechanisms. These mostly β-sheet proteins have very similar structures, despite having as little as 33% sequence similarity. The reversible urea denaturation of these proteins was characterized at equilibrium by circular dichroism and fluorescence. The data were best fit by a two-state model for each of these proteins, suggesting that no significant population of folding intermediates were present at equilibrium. The native states were of similar stability with free energies (linearly extrapolated to 0 M urea, ΔG) of 6.5, 8.3, and 5.5 kcal/mole for CRABP I, CRBP II, and IFABP, respectively. The kinetics of the folding and unfolding processes for these proteins was monitored by stopped-flow CD and fluorescence. Intermediates were observed during both the folding and unfolding of all of these proteins. However, the overall rates of folding and unfolding differed by nearly three orders of magnitude. Further, the spectroscopic properties of the intermediate states were different for each protein, suggesting that different amounts of secondary and/or tertiary structure were associated with each intermediate state for each protein. These data show that the folding path for proteins in the same structural family can be quite different, and provide evidence for different folding landscapes for these sequences. Proteins 33:107–118, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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