Issue 5, 2015

How determinant is N-terminal to C-terminal coupling for protein folding?

Abstract

This work investigates the role of N- to C- termini coupling in the folding transition of small, single domain proteins via extensive Monte Carlo simulations of both lattice and off-lattice models. The reported results provide compelling evidence that the existence of native interactions between the terminal regions of the polypeptide chain (i.e. termini coupling) is a major determinant of the height of the free energy barrier that separates the folded from the denatured state in a two-state folding transition, therefore being a critical modulator of protein folding rates and thermodynamic cooperativity. We further report that termini interactions are able to substantially modify the kinetic behavior dictated by the full set of native interactions. Indeed, a native structure of high contact order with “switched-off” termini-interactions actually folds faster than its circular permutant of lowest CO.

Graphical abstract: How determinant is N-terminal to C-terminal coupling for protein folding?

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Nov 2014
Accepted
09 Dec 2014
First published
11 Dec 2014

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2015,17, 3512-3524

Author version available

How determinant is N-terminal to C-terminal coupling for protein folding?

H. Krobath, A. Rey and P. F. N. Faísca, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2015, 17, 3512 DOI: 10.1039/C4CP05178E

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