Title of article :
The Folding Mechanics of a Knotted Protein
Author/Authors :
Stefan Wallin and Arne V. Johansson، نويسنده , , Konstantin B. Zeldovich، نويسنده , , Jeffrey Skolnick and Eugene I. Shakhnovich، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
10
From page :
884
To page :
893
Abstract :
An increasing number of proteins are being discovered with a remarkable and somewhat surprising feature, a knot in their native structures. How the polypeptide chain is able to “knot” itself during the folding process to form these highly intricate protein topologies is not known. Here we perform a computational study on the 160-amino-acid homodimeric protein YibK, which, like other proteins in the SpoU family of MTases, contains a deep trefoil knot in its C-terminal region. In this study, we use a coarse-grained Cα-chain representation and Langevin dynamics to study folding kinetics. We find that specific, attractive nonnative interactions are critical for knot formation. In the absence of these interactions, i.e., in an energetics driven entirely by native interactions, knot formation is exceedingly unlikely. Further, we find, in concert with recent experimental data on YibK, two parallel folding pathways that we attribute to an early and a late formation of the trefoil knot, respectively. For both pathways, knot formation occurs before dimerization. A bioinformatics analysis of the SpoU family of proteins reveals further that the critical nonnative interactions may originate from evolutionary conserved hydrophobic segments around the knotted region.
Keywords :
Protein folding , trefoil knot , nonnative interactions , Kinetics
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number :
1249323
Link To Document :
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