Force-dependent switch in protein unfolding pathways and transition state movements
Pavel I. Zhuravlev, Michael Hinczewski, Shaon Chakrabarti, Susan, Marqusee, D. Thirumalai

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that protein unfolding pathways switch with force or denaturant concentration, revealing a strongly multidimensional energy landscape and transition state movements, supported by theory and molecular simulations.
Contribution
It provides a unified theory linking upward curvature in unfolding rates to multidimensional energy landscapes and shows structural basis for pathway switches in proteins.
Findings
Unfolding rate curvature indicates pathway switching.
Mutations shift the force at which pathway switch occurs.
The theory explains transition state movements in various proteins.
Abstract
Although known that single domain proteins fold and unfold by parallel pathways, demonstration of this expectation has been difficult to establish in experiments. Unfolding rate, , as a function of force , obtained in single molecule pulling experiments on src SH3 domain, exhibits upward curvature on a plot. Similar observations were reported for other proteins for the unfolding rate . These findings imply unfolding in these single domain proteins involves a switch in the pathway as or is increased from a low to a high value. We provide a unified theory demonstrating that if as a function of a perturbation ( or ) exhibits upward curvature then the underlying energy landscape must be strongly multidimensional. Using molecular simulations we provide a structural basis for the switch in the…
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