Article
Predicting repeat protein folding kinetics from an experimentally determined folding energy landscape
Article first published online: 2 DEC 2008
DOI: 10.1002/pro.9
Copyright © 2008 The Protein Society
Additional Information
How to Cite
Street, T. O. and Barrick, D. (2009), Predicting repeat protein folding kinetics from an experimentally determined folding energy landscape. Protein Science, 18: 58–68. doi: 10.1002/pro.9
Publication History
- Issue published online: 16 DEC 2008
- Article first published online: 2 DEC 2008
- Manuscript Accepted: 13 OCT 2008
- Manuscript Revised: 30 SEP 2008
- Manuscript Received: 25 AUG 2008
Funded by
- Burroughs Welcome Predoctoral Fellowship
- NIH. Grant Number: 1RO1 GM068462
Keywords:
- repeat protein;
- protein folding;
- energy landscape;
- folding kinetics
Abstract
The Notch ankyrin domain is a repeat protein whose folding has been characterized through equilibrium and kinetic measurements. In previous work, equilibrium folding free energies of truncated constructs were used to generate an experimentally determined folding energy landscape (Mello and Barrick, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2004;101:14102–14107). Here, this folding energy landscape is used to parameterize a kinetic model in which local transition probabilities between partly folded states are based on energy values from the landscape. The landscape-based model correctly predicts highly diverse experimentally determined folding kinetics of the Notch ankyrin domain and sequence variants. These predictions include monophasic folding and biphasic unfolding, curvature in the unfolding limb of the chevron plot, population of a transient unfolding intermediate, relative folding rates of 19 variants spanning three orders of magnitude, and a change in the folding pathway that results from C-terminal stabilization. These findings indicate that the folding pathway(s) of the Notch ankyrin domain are thermodynamically selected: the primary determinants of kinetic behavior can be simply deduced from the local stability of individual repeats.

1469-896X/asset/olbannerleft.gif?v=1&s=d218899ae53b2862ab119790ed504b8d72122fb3)
1469-896X/asset/olbannerright.gif?v=1&s=59470eb9a1d9b7b13b1be75e9445e6c46ee2214f)
