Journal
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Volume 102, Issue 52, Pages 18956-18961Publisher
NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0508234102
Keywords
confinement effects; cylindrical pores; entropic stabilization; folding
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Several experiments have suggested that newly synthesized polypeptide chains can adopt helical structures deep within the ribosome exit tunnel. We hypothesize that confinement in the roughly cylindrical tunnel can entropically stabilize a-helices. The hypothesis is validated by using theory and simulations of coarse-grained off-lattice models. The model helix, which is unstable in the bulk, is stabilized in a cylindrical cavity provided the diameter (D) of the cylinder exceeds a critical value D*. When D < D* both the helical content and the helix-coil transition temperature (T-f) decrease abruptly. Surprisingly, we find that the stability of the a-helix depends on the number (N) of amino acid residues. Entropic stabilization, as measured by changes in Tf, increases nonlinearly as N increases. The simulation results are in quantitative agreement with a standard helix-coil theory that takes into account entropy cost of confining a polypeptide chain in a cylinder. The results of this work are in qualitative accord with most of the findings of a recent experiment in which N-dependent ribosome-induced helix stabilization of transmembrane sequences was measured by fluorescence resonance energy transfer.
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