Alpha-Helix folding in the presence of structural constraints
Title | Alpha-Helix folding in the presence of structural constraints |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2008 |
Authors | Ihalainen J.A, Paoli B., Muff S., Backus E.HG, Bredenbeck J., Woolley G.A, Caflisch A., Hamm P. |
Journal | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |
Volume | 105 |
Issue | 28 |
Pagination | 9588-9593 |
Date Published | 2008 Jul 15 |
Type of Article | Research Article |
Keywords | Amino Acid Sequence, Isotopes, Kinetics, Peptides, Photochemistry, Protein Folding, Protein Structure, Secondary, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, Thermodynamics |
Abstract | We have investigated the site-specific folding kinetics of a photoswitchable cross-linked α-helical peptide by using single 13C=18O isotope labeling together with time-resolved IR spectroscopy. We observe that the folding times differ from site to site by a factor of eight at low temperatures (6 °C), whereas at high temperatures (45 °C), the spread is considerably smaller. The trivial sum of the site signals coincides with the overall folding signal of the unlabeled peptide, and different sites fold in a noncooperative manner. Moreover, one of the sites exhibits a decrease of hydrogen bonding upon folding, implying that the unfolded state at low temperature is not unstructured. Molecular dynamics simulations at low temperature reveal a stretched-exponential behavior which originates from parallel folding routes that start from a kinetically partitioned unfolded ensemble. Different metastable structures (i.e., traps) in the unfolded ensemble have a different ratio of loop and helical content. Control simulations of the peptide at high temperature, as well as without the cross-linker at low temperature, show faster and simpler (i.e., single-exponential) folding kinetics. The experimental and simulation results together provide strong evidence that the rate-limiting step in formation of a structurally constrained α-helix is the escape from heterogeneous traps rather than the nucleation rate. This conclusion has important implications for an α-helical segment within a protein, rather than an isolated α-helix, because the cross-linker is a structural constraint similar to those present during the folding of a globular protein. |
DOI | 10.1073/pnas.0712099105 |
pubindex | 0098 |
Alternate Journal | Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. |
PubMed ID | 18621686 |
PubMed Central ID | PMC2474473 |