Journal
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 129, Issue 17, Pages 5673-5682Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja0689740
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Funding
- NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM066800-05, GM066800, R01 GM066800] Funding Source: Medline
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Recent experimental work on fast protein folding brings about an intriguing paradox. Microsecond-folding proteins are supposed to fold near or at the folding speed limit (downhill folding), but yet their folding behavior seems to comply with classical two-state analyses, which imply the crossing of high free energy barriers. However, close inspection of chemical and thermal denaturation kinetic experiments in fast-folding proteins reveals systematic deviations from two-state behavior. Using a simple one-dimensional free energy surface approach we find that such deviations are indeed diagnostic of marginal folding barriers. Furthermore, the quantitative analysis of available fast-kinetic data indicates that many microsecond-folding proteins fold downhill in native conditions. All of these proteins are then promising candidates for an atom-by-atom analysis of protein folding using nuclear magnetic resonance.(1) We also find that the diffusion coefficient for protein folding is strongly temperature dependent, corresponding to an activation energy of similar to 1 kJ center dot mol(-1) per protein residue. As a consequence, the folding speed limit at room temperature is about an order of magnitude slower than the similar to 1 mu s estimates from high-temperature T-jump experiments. Our analysis is quantitatively consistent with the available thermodynamic and kinetic data on slow two-state folding proteins and provides a straightforward explanation for the apparent fast-folding paradox.
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