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Akanuma Satoshi - - 2011
The (β/α)₈-barrel is one of the most abundant folds found in enzymes. To identify the independent folding units and the segment(s) that correspond to a minimum core structure within a (β/α)₈-barrel protein, fragmentation experiments were performed with Escherichia coli phosphoribosylanthranilate isomerase, which has a single (β/α)₈-barrel domain. Our previous studies ...
Kawamura Shiho - - 2010
Rhodopsin is the light receptor that initiates phototransduction in rod photoreceptor cells. The structure and function of rhodopsin are tightly linked to molecular interactions that stabilize and determine the receptor's functional state. Single-molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS) was used to localize and quantify molecular interactions that structurally stabilize bovine and mouse ...
Krieger Christine Carag - - 2010
Force-bearing linkages between the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix are clearly important to normal cell viability-as is evident in a disease such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) which arises in the absence of the linkage protein dystrophin. Therapeutic approaches to DMD include antisense-mediated skipping of exons to delete nonsense mutations while ...
Chang Jui-Yoa - - 2011
The folding pathways of disulfide proteins vary substantially (Arolas et al., Trends Biochem Sci 31: 292-301, 2006). The diversity is mainly manifested by (a) the extent of heterogeneity of folding intermediates, (b) the extent of presence of native-like intermediates, and (c) the variation of folding kinetics. Even among structurally similar ...
von Hansen Yann - - 2010
The influence of the salts KCl, NaCl, and NaI at molar concentrations on the α-helical folding kinetics of the alanine-based oligopeptide Ace-AEAAAKEAAAKA-Nme is investigated by means of (explicit-water) molecular dynamics simulations and a diffusional analysis. The mean first passage times for folding and unfolding are found to be highly salt-specific. ...
Baldwin Robert L - - 2010
A novel analysis of the enthalpy of protein unfolding is proposed and used to test for a desolvation penalty when hydrogen-bonded peptide groups are desolvated via folding. The unfolding enthalpy has three components, (1) the change when peptide hydrogen bonds are broken and the exposed -CO and -NH groups are ...
Sevvana Madhumati - - 2010
Mouse apolipoprotein M (m-apoM) displays a 79% sequence identity to human apolipoprotein M (h-apoM). Both proteins are apolipoproteins associated with high-density lipoproteins, with similar anticipated biological functions. The structure of h-apoM has recently been determined by X-ray crystallography, which revealed that h-apoM displays, as expected, a lipocalin-like fold characterized by ...
Roman Ernesto A - - 2010
In this work, we studied how an amphipathic peptide of the surface of the globular protein thioredoxin, TRX94-108, acquires a native-like structure when it becomes involved in an apolar interaction network. We designed peptide variants where the tendency to form alpha-helical conformation is modulated by replacing each of the leucine ...
Jiang Xuewei - - 2010
Folding network is an effective approach to investigate the high-dimensional free-energy surface of peptide and protein folding, and it can avoid the limitations of the projected free-energy surface based on two-order parameters. In this article, we present improvements of the effectiveness and accuracy of the folding network analysis based on ...
Bereau Tristan - - 2010
Protein folding cooperativity is defined by the nature of the finite-size thermodynamic transition exhibited upon folding: two-state transitions show a free-energy barrier between the folded and unfolded ensembles, while downhill folding is barrierless. A microcanonical analysis, where the energy is the natural variable, has proved to be better suited than ...
Shao Qiang - - 2010
Key elements of β-structure folding include hydrophobic core collapse, turn formation, and assembly of backbone hydrogen bonds. In the present folding simulations of several β-hairpins and β-sheets (peptide 1, protein G B1 domain peptide, TRPZIP2, TRPZIP4, 20mer, and 20mer(D)P6D), the folding free-energy landscape as a function of several reaction coordinates ...
Yoda Takao - - 2010
Despite its small size, chicken villin headpiece subdomain HP36 folds into the native structure with a stable hydrophobic core within several microseconds. How such a small protein keeps up its conformational stability and fast folding in solution is an important issue for understanding molecular mechanisms of protein folding. In this ...
Lin Li - - 2010
Molecules with a defined crescent shape have been generated from the folding or covalent locking of curved structural components connected together via multiple covalent tethers.
Zanol Joana - - 2010
Eunicidan bristle worm families are commonly identified by the shape of their prostomia and pharyngeal structures. However, current hypotheses of homology among these structures are conflicting, making it difficult to assess morphological evolution, reconstruct phylogeny, and produce a stable classification. To generate more consistent hypotheses of homology among eunicidan anterior ...
Schellenberg Matthew J - - 2010
Protein folding involves the formation of secondary structural elements from the primary sequence and their association with tertiary assemblies. The relation of this primary sequence to a specific folded protein structure remains a central question in structural biology. An increasing body of evidence suggests that variations in homologous sequence ranging ...
Liu Ming - - 2010
Protein sequences encode both structure and foldability. Whereas the interrelationship of sequence and structure has been extensively investigated, the origins of folding efficiency are enigmatic. We demonstrate that the folding of proinsulin requires a flexible N-terminal hydrophobic residue that is dispensable for the structure, activity, and stability of the mature ...
Politi Regina - - 2010
We determined the added enthalpic and entropic contributions of protective osmolytes to the folding of a model peptide into its native beta-hairpin state. In contrast to entropically driven steric "crowding", this study shows that sugars and polyols can act as protective osmolytes by primarily diminishing the unfavourable enthalpic contribution to ...
Maass Astrid - - 2010
We analyze the effect of different environmental conditions, sequence lengths and starting configurations on the folding and unfolding pathways of small peptides exhibiting beta turns. We use chignolin and a sequence of peptide G as examples. A variety of different analysis tools allows us to characterize the changes in the ...
Bruun Susanne W - - 2010
In studies of the ensembles of unfolded structures of a four-helix bundle protein, we have detected the presence of potential precursors of native tertiary structures. These observations were based on the perturbation of NMR chemical shifts of the protein backbone atoms by single site mutations. Some mutations change the chemical ...
Best Robert B - - 2010
Despite initial successes in folding of proteins by molecular simulation, it is becoming increasingly evident that current energy functions (force fields) tend to favor either alpha or beta secondary structure, such that the choice of force field is governed by the structural class of the protein. Here, we study the ...
Dhakal Soma - - 2010
Investigation of i-motif is of high importance to fully understand the biological functions of G quadruplexes in the context of double-stranded DNA. Whereas single-molecule approaches have profiled G quadruplexes from a perspective unavailable by bulk techniques, there is a lack of similar literature on the i-motif in the cytosine (C)-rich ...
Li Rui-Fang - - 2010
Taking all the proteins of four virus genomes as samples, the segments of alpha-helix and beta-strand in proteins of the four viruses were obtained. Linear regression analyses between the average polarities and the folding rates of peptide chains were performed for alpha-helices and beta-strands respectively. The results indicated that the ...
Ly Tony - - 2010
A new method for identifying residue specific through space contacts as a function of protein secondary and tertiary structure in the gas phase is presented. Photodissociation of a non-native carbon-iodine bond incorporated into Tyr59 of ubiquitin yields a radical site specifically at that residue. The subsequent radical migration is shown ...
Wei Haiyan - - 2010
To investigate the sequence dependence in the molecular mechanism of urea induced denaturation, molecular dynamics denaturing simulations of two beta-hairpin peptides, a fast folding peptide 1 (SESYINPDGTWTVTE) and a slow folding TRPZIP4 (GEWTWDDATKTWTWTE), were performed in urea aqueous solutions. It was found that beta-hairpin denaturation by urea is highly dependent ...
Edwardraja Selvakumar - - 2010
Typically, single chain Fv antibodies are unable to fold properly under a reducing cytoplasm because of the reduction of disulfide bonds. The inability to fold limits both the production of the functional scFvs and their targeting against antigens, which are generally executed in a reducing cytoplasm. In this study, the ...
Sánchez-Hidalgo Marina - - 2010
Four AS-48 mutants (Trp24Ala, Gly13Lys, Leu40Lys and Ala53Ser) were obtained by site-directed mutagenesis. The minimal inhibitory concentration of each peptide showed that only residue Trp24 was unquestionably involved in the biological activity. Guanidine hydrochloride-induced unfolding assays showed a three-state transition denaturation process, suggesting a molten-globule-like conformation after the first transition.
Wang Min - - 2010
The role of the C-terminal loop L137-S141 in the folding and folding stability of staphylococcal nuclease (SNase) was investigated by deletion mutation. The C-terminal truncated SNase fragments, SNase137, SNase139, SNase140, and SNase141 containing residues 1-137, 1-139, 1-140, and 1-141, respectively, were adopted in this study. Folding states of these four ...
Vandenameele Julie - - 2010
Class A beta-lactamases (M(r) approximately 29000) provide good models for studying the folding mechanism of large monomeric proteins. In particular, the highly conserved cis peptide bond between residues 166 and 167 at the active site of these enzymes controls important steps in their refolding reaction. In this work, we analyzed ...
Diana Donatella - - 2010
The analysis of the folding mechanism in peptides adopting well-defined secondary structure is fundamental to understand protein folding. Herein, we describe the thermal unfolding of a 15-mer vascular endothelial growth factor mimicking alpha-helical peptide (QK(L10A)) through the combination of spectroscopic and computational analyses. In particular, on the basis of the ...
Lewandowska Agnieszka - - 2010
Formation of beta-hairpins is considered the initial step of folding of many proteins and, consequently, peptides constituting the beta-hairpin sequence of proteins (the beta-hairpin-forming peptides) are considered as models of early stages of protein folding. In this article, we discuss the results of experimental studies (circular-dichroism, infrared and nuclear magnetic ...
Lewandowska Agnieszka - - 2010
A 34-residue alpha/beta peptide [IG(28-61)], derived from the C-terminal part of the B3 domain of the immunoglobulin binding protein G from Streptoccocus, was studied using CD and NMR spectroscopy at various temperatures and by differential scanning calorimetry. It was found that the C-terminal part (a 16-residue-long fragment) of this peptide, ...
Feige Matthias Johannes - - 2010
Intact antibodies and antigen binding fragments (Fab) have been previously shown to form an alternatively folded state (AFS) at low pH. This state consists primarily of secondary structure interactions, with reduced tertiary structure content. The AFS can be distinguished from the molten globule state by the formation of nonnative structure ...
Montalvo Geronda - - 2010
Synthetic foldamers consisting of beta-amino acids offer excellent model systems for examining the effect of backbone flexibility on the dynamics of protein folding. Herein, we study the folding-unfolding kinetics of a beta-peptide that folds into a 14-helical structure in water. We find that the T-jump induced relaxation kinetics of this ...
Auer Stefan - - 2010
The intrinsic property of proteins to form structural motifs such as alpha helices and beta sheets leads to a complex phase behavior in which proteins can assemble into various types of aggregates including crystals, liquidlike phases of unfolded or natively folded proteins, and amyloid fibrils. Here we use a coarse-grained ...
Samatova Ekaterina N - - 2010
Kinetic investigation on the wild-type apomyoglobin and its 12 mutants with substitutions of hydrophobic residues by Ala was performed using stopped-flow fluorescence. Characteristics of the kinetic intermediate I and the folding nucleus were derived solely from kinetic data, namely, the slow-phase folding rate constants and the burst-phase amplitudes of Trp ...
Katifori Eleni - - 2010
Upon release from the anther, pollen grains of angiosperm flowers are exposed to a dry environment and dehydrate. To survive this process, pollen grains possess a variety of physiological and structural adaptations. Perhaps the most striking of these adaptations is the ability of the pollen wall to fold onto itself ...
Hashimoto Kosuke - - 2010
Glycosylation is an important aspect of epigenetic regulation. Glycosyltransferase is a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of glycans, which glycosylates more than half of all proteins in eukaryotes and is involved in a wide range of biological processes. It has been suggested previously that homooligomerization in glycosyltransferases and other proteins ...
Ugrinov Krastyu G - - 2010
Protein sequences evolved to fold in cells, including cotranslational folding of nascent polypeptide chains during their synthesis by the ribosome. The vectorial (N- to C-terminal) nature of cotranslational folding constrains the conformations of the nascent polypeptide chain in a manner not experienced by full-length chains diluted out of denaturant. We ...
Hills Ronald D RD - - 2010
The thermodynamic hypothesis of Anfinsen postulates that structures and stabilities of globular proteins are determined by their amino acid sequences. Chain topology, however, is known to influence the folding reaction, in that motifs with a preponderance of local interactions typically fold more rapidly than those with a larger fraction of ...
Scaloni Flavio - - 2010
Nucleophosmin (NPM1), one of the most abundant nucleolar proteins, is a frequent target of oncogenic mutations in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). Mutation-induced changes at the C-terminal domain of NPM1 (Cter-NPM1) compromise its stability and cause the aberrant translocation of NPM1 to the cytosol. Hence, this protein represents a suitable candidate ...
Reiner Andreas - - 2010
A reversible structural unlocking reaction, in which the close-packed van der Waals interactions break cooperatively, has been found for the villin headpiece subdomain (HP35) using triplet-triplet-energy transfer to monitor conformational fluctuations from equilibrium. Unlocking is associated with an unfavorable enthalpy change (DeltaH(0) = 35 +/- 4 kJ/mol) which is nearly ...
Lee Byoung-Chul - - 2010
Residual structure in the fully unfolded state is a key element for understanding protein folding. We show that the residual structure in fully denatured photoactive yellow protein (PYP) is affected by isomerization of its p-coumaric acid (pCA) chromophore. The exposure of total surface area and hydrophobic surface area upon unfolding ...
Baird Nathan J - - 2010
RNA folding occurs via a series of transitions between metastable intermediate states for Mg(2+) concentrations below those needed to fold the native structure. In general, these folding intermediates are considerably less compact than their respective native states. Our previous work demonstrates that the major equilibrium intermediate of the 154-residue specificity ...
Thomas Annick - - 2010
We compare mean force potential values of a large series of PDB models of proteins and peptides and find that, either as monomers or polymers, proteins longer than 200-250 residues have equivalent MFP values that are averaged to -65+/-3 kcal/aa. This value is named the standard or stability value. The ...
Kato Shingo - - 2010
Rapid molecular collapse mediated by nonlocal interactions is believed to be a crucial event for protein folding. To investigate the role of nonlocal interactions in tertiary structure formation, we performed a nonlocal interaction substitution mutation analysis on staphylococcal nuclease (SNase). Y54 and I139 of wild-type (WT) SNase and Delta140-149 were ...
Lewandowska Agnieszka - - 2010
A 20-residue peptide, IG(42-61), derived from the C-terminal beta-hairpin of the B3 domain of the immunoglobulin binding protein G from Streptoccocus was studied using circular dichroism, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy at various temperatures and by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Unlike other related peptides studied so far, this peptide displays ...
Safavi-Hemami Helena - - 2010
Peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerases (PPIases) are ubiquitous proteins that catalyze the cis-trans isomerization of prolines. A number of proteins, such as Drosophila rhodopsin and the human immunodeficiency viral protein HIV-1 Gag, have been identified as endogenous substrates for PPIases. However, very little is known about the interaction of PPIases with small, ...
Dubé Audrey - - 2010
It is believed that peach latent mosaic viroid (PLMVd) strands of both the plus and minus polarities fold into similar secondary and tertiary structures. In order to verify this hypothesis, the behavior of both strands in three biophysical assays was examined. PLMVd transcripts of plus and minus polarity were found ...
Lee In-Ho - - 2010
We have investigated the folding pathway of the 36-residue villin headpiece subdomain (HP-36) by action-derived molecular dynamics simulations. The folding is initiated by hydrophobic collapse, after which the concurrent formation of full tertiary structure and alpha-helical secondary structure is observed. The collapse is observed to be associated with a couple ...
Zhang Jingwen - - 2010
Hepcidin is a four disulfide 25-residue peptide hormone which has a central role in the regulation of iron homeostasis. To support studies on hepcidin we have sought to establish reliable and robust synthetic methods for the preparation of correctly folded materials. While correctly-folded hepcidin has good aqueous solubility, we have ...
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