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Structural Stability of Proteins. Brockwell DJ, Paci E, Zinober RC, Beddard GS, Olmsted PD, Smith DA, Perham RN, Radford SE. (2003). Pulling geometry defines the mechanical resistance of a beta-sheet protein. Nature Structural Biology , 10(9):731-7.
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Structural Stability of Proteins • Brockwell DJ, Paci E, Zinober RC, Beddard GS, Olmsted PD, Smith DA, Perham RN, Radford SE. (2003). Pulling geometry defines the mechanical resistance of a beta-sheet protein. Nature Structural Biology, 10(9):731-7. • Carrion-Vazquez, M., Li, H., Lu, H., Marszalek, P.E., Oberhauser, A.F., and Fernandez, J.M. (2003). The mechanical stability of ubiquitin is linkage dependent. Nature Structural Biology, 10(9):738-43. • Altmann, S.M., Grunberg, R.G., Lenne, P.F., Ylanne, J., Raae, A., Herbert, K., Saraste, M., Nilges, M., Heinrich Horber, J.K. (2002). Pathways and intermediates in forced unfolding of spectrin repeats. Structure, 10:1085-1096. • Best, R.B., Li, B., Steward, A., Daggett, V., and Clarke, J. (2001). Can non-mechanical proteins withstand force? Stretching barnase by atomic force microscopy and molecular dynamics simulation. Biophysical Journal, 81:2344-2356. • Paci, E. and Karplus, M. (2000). Unfolding proteins by external forces and temperature: The importance of topology and energetics. PNAS, 97(12):6521-6526. • Cieplak, M., Hoang, T.X., and Robbins, M.O. (2002). Thermal folding and mechanical unfolding pathways of protein secondary structure. Proteins, 49:104-113. Tom Ioerger
Motivations: • proteins that play a structural role (resilience to physical stress) • actin/myosin, phage tail fibers, bacterial fimbrin • proteins that involve motions (transmission of forces) • protein secretory system, ATPase motor domain • DNA polymerase, helicase, ribosome • Questions: • How to quantify mechanical stability? • Dependence on secondary structure? (a-helices vs. b-sheets) • Relationship to thermodynamic stability? • Similarity of unfolding pathways? • Modeling and MD simulation? • Strengthening in protein design?
Atomic Force Microscope: ubiquitin spectrin titin barnase
Brockwell DJ, Paci E, Zinober RC, Beddard GS, Olmsted PD, Smith DA, Perham RN, Radford SE. (2003). Pulling geometry defines the mechanical resistance of a beta-sheet protein. Nature Structural Biology, 10(9):731-7. Fig. 1 E2lip3: 41 residues I27 (titin): 89 residues E2lip3 = lipoyl domain of dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase subunit (E2p) of pyruvate dehydrogenase from E. coli
Brockwell - Fig. 2 (I27)5 185pN, 24.2nm (I27)4:E2lip3(+) 10.0nm (I27)4:E2lip3(-) 187pN, 24.1nm (I27)2:E2lip3(-):(I27)2 Curves fit by WLC model: (worm-like chain)
(I27)5 (I27)4: E2lip(+) (I27)4: E2lip(-) Brockwell - Fig. 3
Unfolding Rates: ku0E2lip3(+) = 0.0076 s-1 ku0I27 = 0.0020 s-1 ku0E2lip3(+) = 3.8*ku0I27 Brockwell - Fig. 5
SMD: Steered Molecular Dynamics Simulation • XPLOR or NAMD software with CHARMM force field • all-atom, implicit solvent • ends attached to harmonic spring, 1000pN/nm • pulling speeds: 108-1010nm/s (?!) • (probably ~100-10000nm/s) N-term Lys41 C-term N-term 10ns 20ns 0ns Brockwell - Fig. 6
Hui Lu, Barry Isralewitz, André Krammer, Viola Vogel, and Klaus Schulten (1998). Unfolding of Titin Immunoglobulin Domains by Steered Molecular Dynamics Simulation. Biophysical Journal, 75(2):662-671. Water shells: pre-equilibrate restrain waters Steering force applied to atoms on end: f=k(vt-x) a) start state b) pre-burst c) post-burst
Carrion-Vazquez, M., Li, H., Lu, H., Marszalek, P.E., Oberhauser, A.F., and Fernandez, J.M. (2003). • The mechanical stability of ubiquitin is linkage dependent. Nature Structural Biology, 10(9):738-43. Ubiquitin, 76 residues possible PDB model: 1BT0 (Rub1)
Unfolding kinetics: force depends on pulling speed a=a0exp(FDx/kBT) F=ln(a/a0)*(kBT)/Dx) a0=0-force unfolding rate related to pulling speed mol/s => nm/s can also get Dx by fitting Fernandez - Fig. 3
Monte Carlo Simulation a) 2 state kinetic model: ku(F)=Aexp[-(DGu-FDxu)/kBT] kf(F)=Aexp[-(DGf-FDxf)/kBT] b) different trigger distances: W = F*Dx DxN-C = 0.25nm => higher force DxLys48 = 0.63nm => lower force Explaining unfolding barriers: a) both break 5 H-bonds b) both shearing c) same work to unfold WN-C = 51 pN nm WLys48 = 54 pN nm M. CARRION-VAZQUEZ, A.F. OBERHAUSER, S.B. FOWLER, P.E. MARSZALEK, S.E. BROEDEL, J. CLARKE, and J.M. FERNANDEZ (1999). Mechanical and chemical unfolding of a single protein: A comparison. PNAS, 96:3694-3699. Fernandez - Fig. 4
Potential role in protein degradation by proteosomes... Fernandez - Fig. 4
Best, R.B., Li, B., Steward, A., Daggett, V., and Clarke, J. (2001). Can non-mechanical • proteins withstand force? Stretching barnase by atomic force microscopy and molecular • dynamics simulation. Biophysical Journal, 81:2344-2356. barnase
MD simulations show differences in pathways in forced (pulled) versus thermodynamic unfolding: • Forced unfolding retains core, unravels at ends first • Thermal unfolding is more evenly distributed throughout molecule
No “key” event in unfolding for barnase • Transition states (right before burst) are highly structured and native-like • Is mechanical strength determined by fold or function? • Unfolding rates in solution are similar: • titin: ku=4.91 s-1, DG=7.5 kcal/mol • barnase: ku=3.37 s-1, DG=10.2 kcal/mol • from chemical denaturation with Gdm-HCl • Yet barnase unfolds at much lower forces: • titin: 190 pN • barnase: 70 pN • Titin needs to be mechanically strong for its function; • Barnase does not
Forced unfolding of spectrin • Paci, E. and Karplus, M. (2000). Unfolding proteins by external forces and temperature: • The importance of topology and energetics. PNAS, 97(12):6521-6526. End-to-end distance (A) tertiary structure ruptures T(ps) F(pN) partially stable intermediates... In contrast, in thermal unfolding, helices tend to fray much sooner.
Intermediates in the unfolding of spectrin • Altmann, S.M., Grunberg, R.G., Lenne, P.F., Ylanne, J., Raae, A., Herbert, K., Saraste, M., Nilges, M., Heinrich Horber, J.K. (2002). Pathways and intermediates in forced unfolding of spectrin repeats. Structure, 10:1085-1096. Multiple peaks over a range of elongations...
Clustering of intermediates Helix B “kinks” Helix B “flips” P62A/G66A double- mutant in helix B hinge removes 15A peak Two general models of mechanical unfolding: 1) unique rupture event (force peak), followed by smooth unfolding 2) gradual unfolding through various intermediates
Cieplak, M., Hoang, T.X., and Robbins, M.O. (2002). Thermal folding and • mechanical unfolding pathways of protein secondary structure. Proteins, 49:104-113. Go-like simulation: beads on a string (C-alpha atoms only) artificial force field (quadratic bond stretching, 6-12 “L-J” potential) Langevin dyanmics (solvent viscosity) On pulling, ends unravel first. Even distribution of force. Fewer native contacts stabilize ends. Timing of (i,i+4) contacts. Ends fold first too (tc). Timing of (i,16-i) contacts. Middle folds first (tc) and is pulled apart last (du). Stress focused on end bond. Conclusion: forced unfolding is NOT necessarily the opposite of the native folding pathway (at least not for a-helices).