Extremely rapid protein folding in the absence of intermediates
- 1 August 1995
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
- Vol. 2 (8) , 663-673
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nsb0895-663
Abstract
Here we used the cold-shock protein CspB from Bacillus subtilis to study protein folding at an elementary level. The thermodynamic stability of this small five-stranded beta-barrel protein is low, but unfolding and refolding are extremely rapid reactions. In 0.6 M urea the time constant of refolding is about 1.5 ms, and at the transition midpoint (4 M urea) the folded and unfolded forms equilibrate in less than 100 ms. Both the equilibrium unfolding transition and the folding kinetics are perfectly described by a N<-->U two-state model. The validity of this model was confirmed by several kinetic tests. Folding intermediates could neither be detected at equilibrium nor in the folding kinetics. We suggest that the extremely rapid folding of CspB and the absence of folding intermediates are related phenomena.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- The nature of protein folding pathways: The classical versus the new viewJournal of Biomolecular NMR, 1995
- Hydrogen exchange rates and protein foldingCurrent Opinion in Structural Biology, 1994
- Intact Disulfide Bonds Decelerate the Folding of Ribonuclease T1Journal of Molecular Biology, 1994
- The barriers in protein foldingNature Structural & Molecular Biology, 1994
- The energetic ups and downs of protein foldingNature Structural & Molecular Biology, 1994
- Kinetic roles and conformational properties of the non-native two-disulphide intermediates in the refolding of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitorJournal of Molecular Biology, 1992
- Analysis of the steric strain in the polypeptide backbone of protein moleculesProteins-Structure Function and Bioinformatics, 1991
- Reexamination of the Folding of BPTI: Predominance of Native IntermediatesScience, 1991
- Conformation of amino acid side-chains in proteinsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1978
- Protein-folding dynamicsNature, 1976