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Dynamic Monte Carlo simulations of globular protein folding/unfolding pathways. II. Alpha-helical motifs
Authors:A Sikorski  J Skolnick
Institution:Department of Chemistry, Washington University, St Louis, MO 63130.
Abstract:Dynamic Monte Carlo simulations of the folding pathways of alpha-helical protein motifs have been undertaken in the context of a diamond lattice model of globular proteins. The first question addressed in the nature of the assembly process of an alpha-helical hairpin. While the hairpin could, in principle, be formed via the diffusion-collision-adhesion of isolated performed helices, this is not the dominant mechanism of assembly found in the simulations. Rather, the helices that form native hairpins are constructed on-site, with folding initiating at or near the turn in almost all cases. Next, the folding/unfolding pathways of four-helix bundles having tight bends and one and two long loops in the native state are explored. Once again, an on-site construction mechanism of folding obtains, with a hairpin forming first, followed by the formation of a three-helix bundle, and finally the fourth helix of the native bundle assembles. Unfolding is essentially the reverse of folding. A simplified analytic theory is developed that reproduces the equilibrium folding transitions obtained from the simulations remarkably well and, for the dominant folding pathway, correctly identifies the intermediates seen in the simulations. The analytic theory provides the free energy along the reaction co-ordinate and identifies the transition state for all three motifs as being quite close to the native state, with three of the four helices assembled, and approximately one turn of the fourth helix in place. The transition state is separated from the native conformation by a free-energy barrier of mainly energetic origin and from the denatured state by a barrier of mainly entropic origin. The general features of the folding pathway seen in all variants of the model four-helix bundles are similar to those observed in the folding of beta-barrel, Greek key proteins; this suggests that many of the qualitative aspects of folding are invariant to the particular native state topology and secondary structure.
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