4.3 Article

Transition states for folding of circular-permuted proteins

Journal

PROTEINS-STRUCTURE FUNCTION AND BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 57, Issue 1, Pages 153-171

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/prot.20175

Keywords

topology; circular permutation; folding nucleus; free-energy functional; contact map

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To explore the role of entropy and chain connectivity in protein folding, a particularly interesting scheme, namely, the circular permutation, has been used. Recently, experimental observations showed that there are large differences in the folding mechanisms between the wild-type proteins and their circular permutants. These differences are strongly related to the change in the intrachain connectivity. Some results obtained by molecular dynamics simulations also showed a good agreement with the experimental findings. Here, we use a topology-based free-energy functional method to study the role of the chain connectivity in folding by comparing features of transition states of the wildtype proteins with those of their circular permutants. We concentrate our study on 3 small globular proteins, namely, the alpha-spectrin SH3 domain (SH3), the chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2), and the ribosomal protein S6, and obtain exciting results that are consistent with the available experimental and simulation results. A heterogeneity of the interaction energies between contacts for protein CI2 and for protein S6 is also introduced, which characterizes the strong interactions between contacts with long loops, as speculated from experiments for protein S6. The comparison between the folding nucleus of the wild-type proteins and those of their circular permutants indicates that chain connectivity affects remarkably the shapes of the energy profiles and thus the folding mechanism. Further comparisons between our theoretical calculated phi(th) values and the experimental observed phi(exp) values for the 3 proteins and their permutants show that our results are in good agreement with experimental ones and that correlations between them are high. These indicate that the free-energy functional method really provides a way to analyze the folding behavior of the circular-permuted proteins and therefore the folding mechanism of the wild-type proteins. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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