A dynamic intermediate state limits the folding rate of a discontinuous two-domain protein
Ganesh Agam, Anders Barth, Don C. Lamb

TL;DR
This study investigates how a dynamic intermediate state influences the slow folding of a two-domain protein, using smFRET experiments, simulations, and chaperonin interactions to reveal the folding pathway and barriers.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the folding mechanism of discontinuous two-domain proteins, highlighting the role of a dynamic intermediate and entropic barriers in slow folding.
Findings
Folding intermediate is dynamic on sub-millisecond timescale.
Delay in NTD folding is due to an entropic barrier.
Chaperonin confinement helps overcome folding barriers.
Abstract
Protein folding is an indispensable process for the majority of proteins after their synthesis from ribosomes in the cell. Most in vitro protein folding studies have focused on single-domain proteins. Hence, it is important to understand the folding process of multi-domain proteins, especially when domains are discontinuous. We choose the Maltose binding protein (MBP) as a model system. In particular, we studied a mutant of MBP that folds slowly. Here, using two- and three-color single-molecule Foerster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) experiments, we study the refolding of both the domains and the interaction between the domains of DM-MBP. Initial two-color smFRET measurements of the N-terminal domain (NTD) reveal the presence of a folding intermediate. The same folding intermediate is observed in measurements monitoring the C- terminal domain (CTD) and the NTD-CTD (N-C) interface.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProtein Structure and Dynamics · Enzyme Structure and Function · Toxin Mechanisms and Immunotoxins
