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Exploring the protein funnel energy landscape for folding
and function
Jose N. Onuchic, UC San Diego, Center for Theoretical Biological Physics
and Department of Physics
Globally the energy landscape of a folding protein resembles a partially
rough funnel. The local roughness of the funnel reflects transient trapping
of the protein configurations in local free energy minima. The overall
funnel shape of the landscape, superimposed on this roughness, arises
because the interactions present in the native structure of natural
proteins conflict with each other much less than expected if there were
no constraints of evolutionary design to achieve reliable and relatively
fast folding. The kinetics of folding is best considered as a progressive
organization of an ensemble of partially folded structures through which
the protein passes through on its way to the folded structure.
The folding mechanisms for several fast folding proteins can be quantitatively
described using an energy landscape theory to set up the correspondence
with simulations of protein minimalist models. Using these simulations
together with analytical theory, we can learn about good (minimally
frustrated) folding sequences and non-folding (frustrated) sequences.
An important idea that emerges from the energy landscape theory is that
subtle features of the protein landscape can profoundly affect the apparent
mechanism of folding. The relationship between various characteristic
temperatures in the phase diagrams and landmarks in the folding funnel
at fixed temperatures can be used to classify different folding behaviors.
Experiments on the dependence of the folding and unfolding times, and
the stability of these proteins to denaturant concentration and site-directed
mutagenesis, and on the early events of folding allow us to infer the
global characteristics of the energy landscape.
In addition to need to minimize energetic frustration, the topology
of the native fold also plays a major role in the folding mechanism.
Some folding motifs are easier to design than others suggesting the
possibility that evolution not only selected sequences with sufficiently
small energetic frustration but also selected more easily designable
native structures. We have demonstrated for several proteins (such as
CI2 and SH3) that they are sufficiently well designed (i.e., reduced
energetic frustration) that much of the heterogeneity observed in their
transition state ensemble (TSE) is determined by topology. Topological
effects go beyond the structure of the TSE. The overall structure of
the on-route and off-route (traps) intermediates for the folding of
more complex proteins is also strongly influenced by topology. Utilizing
this theoretical framework, simulations of minimalist models and their
connections to more computationally-expensive all-atom simulations,
we are now in the process of obtaining a quantitative understanding
of the folding problem, which allows for a direct comparison to a new
generation of folding experiments. Connections between the folding landscape
and protein function will also be discussed.
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The P/T Colloquium is
typically held each
Thursday, 3:455:00 PM.
Refreshments are served
at 3:15 PM.
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