4.8 Article

Single-molecule fluorescence reveals sequence-specific misfolding in multidomain proteins

Journal

NATURE
Volume 474, Issue 7353, Pages 662-U142

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature10099

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [064417]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation
  3. Swiss National Center of Competence in Research in Structural Biology
  4. UK Medical Research Council
  5. Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship
  6. Royal Society
  7. Medical Research Council [MC_U105485808] Funding Source: researchfish
  8. MRC [MC_U105485808] Funding Source: UKRI

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A large range of debilitating medical conditions(1) is linked to protein misfolding, which may compete with productive folding particularly in proteins containing multiple domains(2). Seventy-five per cent of the eukaryotic proteome consists of multidomain proteins, yet it is not understood how interdomain misfolding is avoided. It has been proposed that maintaining low sequence identity between covalently linked domains is a mechanism to avoid misfolding(3). Here we use single-molecule Forster resonance energy transfer(4,5) to detect and quantify rare misfolding events in tandem immunoglobulin domains from the I band of titin under native conditions. About 5.5 per cent of molecules with identical domains misfold during refolding in vitro and form an unexpectedly stable state with an unfolding half-time of several days. Tandem arrays of immunoglobulin-like domains in humans show significantly lower sequence identity between neighbouring domains than between non-adjacent domains(3). In particular, the sequence identity of neighbouring domains has been found to be preferentially below 40 per cent(3). We observe no misfolding for a tandem of naturally neighbouring domains with low sequence identity (24 per cent), whereas misfolding occurs between domains that are 42 per cent identical. Coarse-grained molecular simulations predict the formation of domain-swapped structures that are in excellent agreement with the observed transfer efficiency of the misfolded species. We infer that the interactions underlying misfolding are very specific and result in a sequence-specific domain-swapping mechanism. Diversifying the sequence between neighbouring domains seems to be a successful evolutionary strategy to avoid misfolding in multidomain proteins.

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