Difining the Nature of Thermal Intermediate in 3 State Folding Proteins: Apoflavodoxin, a Study Case

Fecha de publicación

2013-05-08T15:47:24Z

2013-05-08T15:47:24Z

2012-08

2013-05-08T15:47:24Z

Resumen

The early stages of the thermal unfolding of apoflavodoxin have been determined by using atomistic multi microsecond-scale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations complemented with a variety of experimental techniques. Results strongly suggest that the intermediate is reached very early in the thermal unfolding process and that it has the properties of an"activated" form of the native state, where thermal fluctuations in the loops break loop-loop contacts. The unrestrained loops gain then kinetic energy corrupting short secondary structure elements without corrupting the core of the protein. The MD-derived ensembles agree with experimental observables and draw a picture of the intermediate state inconsistent with a well-defined structure and characteristic of a typical partially disordered protein. Our results allow us to speculate that proteins with a well packed core connected by long loops might behave as partially disordered proteins under native conditions, or alternatively behave as three state folders. Small details in the sequence, easily tunable by evolution, can yield to one or the other type of proteins.

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Inglés

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Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002647

PLoS Computational Biology, 2012, vol. 8, num. 8, p. e1002647

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002647

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cc-by (c) García Fandiño, R. et al., 2012

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es