Multiple pathways on a protein-folding energy landscape: Kinetic evidence

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

The National Academy of Sciences

RESUMO

The funnel landscape model predicts that protein folding proceeds through multiple kinetic pathways. Experimental evidence is presented for more than one such pathway in the folding dynamics of a globular protein, cytochrome c. After photodissociation of CO from the partially denatured ferrous protein, fast time-resolved CD spectroscopy shows a submillisecond folding process that is complete in ≈10−6 s, concomitant with heme binding of a methionine residue. Kinetic modeling of time-resolved magnetic circular dichroism data further provides strong evidence that a 50-μs heme–histidine binding process proceeds in parallel with the faster pathway, implying that Met and His binding occur in different conformational ensembles of the protein, i.e., along respective ultrafast (microseconds) and fast (milliseconds) folding pathways. This kinetic heterogeneity appears to be intrinsic to the diffusional nature of early folding dynamics on the energy landscape, as opposed to the late-time heterogeneity associated with nonnative heme ligation and proline isomers in cytochrome c.

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