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1.
J Mol Biol ; 298(5): 937-53, 2000 May 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10801360

ABSTRACT

Recent experimental results suggest that the native fold, or topology, plays a primary role in determining the structure of the transition state ensemble, at least for small, fast-folding proteins. To investigate the extent of the topological control of the folding process, we studied the folding of simplified models of five small globular proteins constructed using a Go-like potential to retain the information about the native structures but drastically reduce the energetic frustration and energetic heterogeneity among residue-residue native interactions. By comparing the structure of the transition state ensemble (experimentally determined by Phi-values) and of the intermediates with those obtained using our models, we show that these energetically unfrustrated models can reproduce the global experimentally known features of the transition state ensembles and "en-route" intermediates, at least for the analyzed proteins. This result clearly indicates that, as long as the protein sequence is sufficiently minimally frustrated, topology plays a central role in determining the folding mechanism.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Protein Folding , Proteins/chemistry , Proteins/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Binding Sites , Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Methyl-Accepting Chemotaxis Proteins , Molecular Weight , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides/metabolism , Plant Proteins , Protein Structure, Secondary , Ribonuclease H/chemistry , Ribonuclease H/metabolism , Ribonucleases/chemistry , Ribonucleases/metabolism , Temperature , Thermodynamics , src Homology Domains
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 97(2): 634-9, 2000 Jan 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10639131

ABSTRACT

We present a method for determining structural properties of the ensemble of folding transition states from protein simulations. This method relies on thermodynamic quantities (free energies as a function of global reaction coordinates, such as the percentage of native contacts) and not on "kinetic" measurements (rates, transmission coefficients, complete trajectories); consequently, it requires fewer computational resources compared with other approaches, making it more suited to large and complex models. We explain the theoretical framework that underlies this method and use it to clarify the connection between the experimentally determined Phi value, a quantity determined by the ratio of rate and stability changes due to point mutations, and the average structure of the transition state ensemble. To determine the accuracy of this thermodynamic approach, we apply it to minimalist protein models and compare these results with the ones obtained by using the standard experimental procedure for determining Phi values. We show that the accuracy of both methods depends sensitively on the amount of frustration. In particular, the results are similar when applied to models with minimal amounts of frustration, characteristic of rapid-folding, single-domain globular proteins.


Subject(s)
Protein Folding , Proteins/chemistry , Kinetics , Models, Chemical , Mutation , Proteins/genetics , Thermodynamics
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 95(11): 5921-8, 1998 May 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9600893

ABSTRACT

A full quantitative understanding of the protein folding problem is now becoming possible with the help of the energy landscape theory and the protein folding funnel concept. Good folding sequences have a landscape that resembles a rough funnel where the energy bias towards the native state is larger than its ruggedness. Such a landscape leads not only to fast folding and stable native conformations but, more importantly, to sequences that are robust to variations in the protein environment and to sequence mutations. In this paper, an off-lattice model of sequences that fold into a beta-barrel native structure is used to describe a framework that can quantitatively distinguish good and bad folders. The two sequences analyzed have the same native structure, but one of them is minimally frustrated whereas the other one exhibits a high degree of frustration.


Subject(s)
Models, Molecular , Models, Theoretical , Protein Folding , Proteins/chemistry , Animals , Humans
5.
Phys Rev A ; 51(6): 4640-4651, 1995 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9912154
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