Crowding effects on the mechanical stability and unfolding pathways of Ubiquitin
Preprint
- 5 November 2008
Abstract
The interior of cells is crowded thus making it important to assess the effects of macromolecules on the folding of proteins. Using the Self-Organized Polymer (SOP) model, which is a coarse-grained representation of polypeptide chains, we probe the mechanical stability of Ubiquitin (Ub) monomers and trimers ((Ub)$_3$) in the presence of monodisperse spherical crowding agents. Crowding increases the volume fraction ($\Phi_c$)-dependent average force ($$), relative to the value at $\Phi_c = 0$, needed to unfold Ub and the polyprotein. For a given $\Phi_c$, the values of $$ increase as the diameter ($\sigma_c$) of the crowding particles decreases. The average unfolding force $$ depends on the ratio $\frac{D}{R_g}$, where $D \approx \sigma_c (\frac{\pi}{6 \Phi_c})^{{1/3}}$ with $R_g$ being the radius of gyration of Ub (or (Ub)$_3$) in the unfolded state. Examination of the unfolding pathways shows that, relative to $\Phi_c = 0$, crowding promotes reassociation of ruptured secondary structural elements. Both the nature of the unfolding pathways and $$ for (Ub)$_3$ are altered in the presence of crowding particles with the effect being most dramatic for the subunit that unfolds last. We predict, based on SOP simulations and theoretical arguments, that $ \sim \Phi_c^{\frac{1}{3\nu}}$, where $\nu$ is the Flory exponent that describes the unfolded (random coil) state of the protein.
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All Related Versions
- Version 1, 2008-11-05, ArXiv
- Published version: The Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 113 (1), 359.
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