Literature DB >> 23758397

Structural and energetic determinants of co-translational folding.

Heinrich Krobath1, Eugene I Shakhnovich, Patrícia F N Faísca.   

Abstract

We performed extensive lattice Monte Carlo simulations of ribosome-bound stalled nascent chains (RNCs) to explore the relative roles of native topology and non-native interactions in co-translational folding of small proteins. We found that the formation of a substantial part of the native structure generally occurs towards the end of protein synthesis. However, multi-domain structures, which are rich in local interactions, are able to develop gradually during chain elongation, while those with proximate chain termini require full protein synthesis to fold. A detailed assessment of the conformational ensembles populated by RNCs with different lengths reveals that the directionality of protein synthesis has a fine-tuning effect on the probability to populate low-energy conformations. In particular, if the participation of non-native interactions in folding energetics is mild, the formation of native-like conformations is majorly determined by the properties of the contact map around the tethering terminus. Likewise, a pair of RNCs differing by only 1-2 residues can populate structurally well-resolved low energy conformations with significantly different probabilities. An interesting structural feature of these low-energy conformations is that, irrespective of native structure, their non-native interactions are always long-ranged and marginally stabilizing. A comparison between the conformational spectra of RNCs and chain fragments folding freely in the bulk reveals drastic changes amongst the two set-ups depending on the native structure. Furthermore, they also show that the ribosome may enhance (up to 20%) the population of low energy conformations for chains folding to native structures dominated by local interactions. In contrast, a RNC folding to a non-local topology is forced to remain largely unstructured but can attain low energy conformations in bulk.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23758397     DOI: 10.1063/1.4808044

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Chem Phys        ISSN: 0021-9606            Impact factor:   3.488


  9 in total

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8.  How Co-translational Folding of Multi-domain Protein Is Affected by Elongation Schedule: Molecular Simulations.

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  9 in total

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