Protein folding and misfolding: mechanism and principles
- 1 November 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
- Vol. 40 (4) , 1-41
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0033583508004654
Abstract
Two fundamentally different views of how proteins fold are now being debated. Do proteins fold through multiple unpredictable routes directed only by the energetically downhill nature of the folding landscape or do they fold through specific intermediates in a defined pathway that systematically puts predetermined pieces of the target native protein into place? It has now become possible to determine the structure of protein folding intermediates, evaluate their equilibrium and kinetic parameters, and establish their pathway relationships. Results obtained for many proteins have serendipitously revealed a new dimension of protein structure. Cooperative structural units of the native protein, called foldons, unfold and refold repeatedly even under native conditions. Much evidence obtained by hydrogen exchange and other methods now indicates that cooperative foldon units and not individual amino acids account for the unit steps in protein folding pathways. The formation of foldons and their ordered pathway assembly systematically puts native-like foldon building blocks into place, guided by a sequential stabilization mechanism in which prior native-like structure templates the formation of incoming foldons with complementary structure. Thus the same propensities and interactions that specify the final native state, encoded in the amino-acid sequence of every protein, determine the pathway for getting there. Experimental observations that have been interpreted differently, in terms of multiple independent pathways, appear to be due to chance misfolding errors that cause different population fractions to block at different pathway points, populate different pathway intermediates, and fold at different rates. This paper summarizes the experimental basis for these three determining principles and their consequences. Cooperative native-likefoldon unitsand thesequential stabilizationprocess together generate predetermined stepwise pathways. Optional misfoldingerrors are responsible for 3-state and heterogeneous kinetic folding.Keywords
This publication has 141 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Foldon Substructure of Staphylococcal NucleaseJournal of Molecular Biology, 2008
- Critical assessment of methods of protein structure prediction—Round VIIProteins-Structure Function and Bioinformatics, 2007
- The Folding Pathway of T4 Lysozyme: An On-pathway Hidden Folding IntermediateJournal of Molecular Biology, 2007
- Hydrogen exchange and mass spectrometry: A historical perspectiveJournal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry, 2006
- How Cytochrome c Folds, and Why: Submolecular Foldon Units and their Stepwise Sequential StabilizationJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- Protein Misfolding: Optional Barriers, Misfolded Intermediates, and Pathway HeterogeneityJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- The equilibrium unfolding pathway of a (β/α)8 barrelJournal of Molecular Biology, 2002
- A rapid test for identification of autonomous folding units in proteinsJournal of Molecular Biology, 2000
- Effect of H helix destabilizing mutations on the kinetic and equilibrium folding of apomyoglobinJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- Energetic components of the allosteric machinery in hemoglobin measured by hydrogen exchangeJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998