Author/Authors :
A. Baumketner، نويسنده , , A. Jewett، نويسنده , , J.E. Shea، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Chaperonins, such as the GroE complex of the bacteria Escherichia coli, assist the folding of proteins under non-permissive folding conditions by providing a cavity in which the newly translated or translocated protein can be encapsulated. Whether the chaperonin cage plays a passive role in protecting the protein from aggregation, or an active role in accelerating folding rates, remains a matter of debate. Here, we investigate the role of confinement in chaperonin mediated folding through molecular dynamics simulations. We designed a substrate protein with an α/β sandwich fold, a common structural motif found in GroE substrate proteins and confined it to a spherical hydrophilic cage which mimicked the interior of the GroEL/ES cavity. The thermodynamics and kinetics of folding were studied over a wide range of temperature and cage radii. Confinement was seen to significantly raise the collapse temperature, Tc, as a result of the associated entropy loss of the unfolded state. The folding temperature, Tf, on the other hand, remained unaffected by encapsulation, a consequence of the folding mechanism of this protein that involves an initial collapse to a compact misfolded state prior to rearranging to the native state. Folding rates were observed to be either accelerated or retarded compared to bulk folding rates, depending on the temperature of the simulation. Rate enhancements due to confinement were observed only at temperatures above the temperature Tm, which corresponds to the temperature at which the protein folds fastest. For this protein, Tm lies above the folding temperature, Tf, implying that encapsulation alone will not lead to a rate enhancement under conditions where the native state is stable (T
Keywords :
Protein folding , chaperonin , Computer simulation , energy landscape , minimalist off-lattice model
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology