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Reconciling Intermediates in Mechanical Unfolding Experiments with Two-State Protein Folding in Bulk.


ABSTRACT: Most experimentally well-characterized single domain proteins of less than 100 residues have been found to be two-state folders. That is, only two distinct populations can explain both equilibrium and kinetic measurements. Results from single molecule force spectroscopy, where a protein is unfolded by applying a mechanical pulling force to its ends, have largely confirmed this description for proteins found to be two-state in ensemble experiments. Recently, however, stable intermediates have been reported in mechanical unfolding experiments on a cold-shock protein previously found to be a prototypical two-state folder. Here, we tackle this discrepancy using free energy landscapes and Markov state models derived from coarse-grained molecular simulations. We show that protein folding intermediates can be selectively stabilized by the pulling force and that the populations of these intermediates vary in a force-dependent manner. Our model qualitatively captures the experimental results and suggests a possible origin of the apparent discrepancy.

SUBMITTER: de Sancho D 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5597958 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Reconciling Intermediates in Mechanical Unfolding Experiments with Two-State Protein Folding in Bulk.

de Sancho David D   Best Robert B RB  

The journal of physical chemistry letters 20160914 19


Most experimentally well-characterized single domain proteins of less than 100 residues have been found to be two-state folders. That is, only two distinct populations can explain both equilibrium and kinetic measurements. Results from single molecule force spectroscopy, where a protein is unfolded by applying a mechanical pulling force to its ends, have largely confirmed this description for proteins found to be two-state in ensemble experiments. Recently, however, stable intermediates have bee  ...[more]

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