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Knots in soft condensed matter.


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Authors

Coluzza, Ivan 
Jackson, Sophie E 
Micheletti, Cristian 
Miller, Mark A 

Abstract

Understanding the mechanism by which a polypeptide chain thread itself spontaneously to attain a knotted conformation has been a major challenge in the field of protein folding. HP0242 is a homodimeric protein from Helicobacter pylori with intertwined helices to form a unique pseudo-knotted folding topology. A tandem HP0242 repeat has been constructed to become the first engineered trefoil-knotted protein. Its small size renders it a model system for computational analyses to examine its folding and knotting pathways. Here we report a multi-parametric study on the folding stability and kinetics of a library of HP0242 variants, including the trefoil-knotted tandem HP0242 repeat, using far-UV circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy. Equilibrium chemical denaturation of HP0242 variants shows the presence of highly populated dimeric and structurally heterogeneous folding intermediates. Such equilibrium folding intermediates retain significant amount of helical structures except those at the N- and C-terminal regions in the native structure. Stopped-flow fluorescence measurements of HP0242 variants show that spontaneous refolding into knotted structures can be achieved within seconds, which is several orders of magnitude faster than previously observed for other knotted proteins. Nevertheless, the complex chevron plots indicate that HP0242 variants are prone to misfold into kinetic traps, leading to severely rolled-over refolding arms. The experimental observations are in general agreement with the previously reported molecular dynamics simulations. Based on our results, kinetic folding pathways are proposed to qualitatively describe the complex folding processes of HP0242 variants.

Description

Keywords

40 Engineering, 51 Physical Sciences, 4016 Materials Engineering, 4018 Nanotechnology, 5104 Condensed Matter Physics

Journal Title

J Phys Condens Matter

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0953-8984
1361-648X

Volume Title

27

Publisher

IOP Publishing
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/I001352/1)
The project is supported by a Career Development Award of the International Human Frontier Science Program, and funding from the Ministry of Science and Technology, National Tsing Hua University and Academia Sinica, Taiwan. Yu-Nan Liu was a recipient of a short-term EMBO fellowship to carry out preliminary experiments in Dr Sophie Jackson’s laboratory at the Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge.