Unit

UNIT 28.6 Overview of the Regulation of Disulfide Bond Formation in Peptide and Protein Folding

  1. Yuji Hidaka

Published Online: 1 APR 2014

DOI: 10.1002/0471140864.ps2806s76

Current Protocols in Protein Science

Current Protocols in Protein Science

How to Cite

Hidaka, Y. 2014. Overview of the Regulation of Disulfide Bond Formation in Peptide and Protein Folding. Current Protocols in Protein Science. 76:28.6:28.6.1–28.6.6.

Author Information

  1. Faculty of Science and Engineering, Kinki University, Higashi-Osaka, Osaka, Japan

Publication History

  1. Published Online: 1 APR 2014

Abstract

Disulfide bonds play a critical role in the maintenance of the native conformation of proteins under thermodynamic control. In general, disulfide bond formation is associated with protein folding, and this restricts the formation of folding intermediates such as misbridged disulfide isomers or kinetically trapped conformations, which provide important information related to how proteins fold into their native conformation. Therefore, numerous studies have focused on the structural analysis of folding intermediates in vitro. However, isolating or trapping folding intermediates, as well as the entire proteins, including mutant proteins, is not an easy task. Several chemical methods have recently been developed for examining peptide and protein folding and for producing, e.g., intact, post-translationally modified, or kinetically trapped proteins, or proteins with misbridged disulfide bonds. This overview introduces chemical methods for regulating the formation of disulfide bonds of peptides and proteins in the context of the thermodynamic and kinetic control of peptide and protein folding. Curr. Protoc. Protein Sci. 76:28.6.1-28.6.6. © 2014 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Keywords:

  • disulfide;
  • folding;
  • intermediate;
  • kinetic;
  • regioselective