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Role of Disulfide Bonds and Topological Frustration in the Kinetic Partitioning of Lysozyme Folding Pathways

Muttathukattil, Aswathy N and Singh, Prashant Chandra and Reddy, Govardhan (2019) Role of Disulfide Bonds and Topological Frustration in the Kinetic Partitioning of Lysozyme Folding Pathways. In: JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 123 (15). pp. 3232-3241.

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Official URL: https://dx.doi.org/ 10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b00739

Abstract

Disulfide bonds in proteins can strongly influence the folding pathways by constraining the conformational space. Lysozyme has four disulfide bonds and is widely studied for its antibacterial properties. Experiments on lysozyme infer that the protein folds through a fast and a slow pathway. However, the reasons for the kinetic partitioning in the folding pathways are not completely clear. Using a coarse-grained protein model and simulations, we show that two out of the four disulfide bonds, which are present in the alpha-domain of lysozyme, are responsible for the slow folding pathway. In this pathway, a kinetically trapped intermediate state, which is close to the native state, is populated. In this state, the orientations of a-helices present in the alpha-domain are misaligned relative to each other. The protein in this state has to partially unfold by breaking down the interhelical contacts between the misaligned helices to fold to the native state. However, the topological constraints due to the two disulfide bonds present in the alpha-domain make the protein less flexible, and it is trapped in this conformation for hundreds of milliseconds. On disabling these disulfide bonds, we find that the kinetically trapped intermediate state and the slow folding pathway disappear. Simulations mimicking the folding of protein without disulfide bonds under oxidative conditions show that the native disulfide bonds are formed as the protein folds, indicating that folding guides the formation of disulfide bonds. The sequence of formation of the disulfide bonds is Cys64-Cys80 -> Cys76-Cys94 -> Cys30-Cys115 -> Cys6-Cys127. Any disulfide bond that forms before its precursor in the sequence has to break and follow the sequence for the protein to fold. These results show that lysozyme also serves as a very good model system to probe the role of disulfide bonds and topological frustration in protein folding. The predictions from the simulations can be verified by single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer or single-molecule pulling experiments, which can probe heterogeneity in the folding pathways.

Item Type: Journal Article
Publication: JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Publisher: AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Additional Information: The copyright for this article belongs to American Chemical Society
Department/Centre: Division of Chemical Sciences > Solid State & Structural Chemistry Unit
Date Deposited: 25 Jun 2019 17:50
Last Modified: 25 Jun 2019 17:50
URI: http://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/62794

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