Hairpin folding rates reflect mutations within and remote from the turn region.
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ABSTRACT: Hairpins play a central role in numerous protein folding and misfolding scenarios. Prior studies of hairpin folding, many conducted with analogs of a sequence from the B1 domain of protein G, suggest that faster folding can be achieved only by optimizing the turn propensity of the reversing loop. Based on studies using dynamic NMR, the native GB1 sequence is a slow folding hairpin (k(F)(278)=1.5 x 10(4)/s). GB1 hairpin analogs spanning a wide range of thermodynamic stabilities (DeltaG(U)(298)=-3.09 to+3.25 kJ/mol) were examined. Fold-stabilizing changes in the reversing loop can act either by accelerating folding or retarding unfolding; we present examples of both types. The introduction of an attractive side-chain/side-chain Coulombic interaction at the chain termini further stabilizes this hairpin. The 1.9-fold increase in folding rate constant observed for this change at the chain termini implies that this Coulombic interaction contributes before or at the transition state. This observation is difficult to rationalize by "zipper" folding pathways that require native turn formation as the sole nucleating event; it also suggests that Coulombic interactions should be considered in the design of systems intended to probe the protein folding speed limit.
SUBMITTER: Olsen KA
PROVIDER: S-EPMC1266093 | biostudies-literature |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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