Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2188338 Journal of Molecular Biology 2007 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Protein folding experiments demonstrate that the folding behaviors of many proteins can be roughly classified into two types: two-state kinetics and multi-state kinetics. Although the two types of protein folding kinetics have been observed for a long time, what determines the folding type of a protein is still largely unclear. The present work performed a comparative study based on a dataset of 43 two-state and 42 multi-state folders at different levels of proteins' intrinsic properties from the simplest sequence length to native structure topology. The results show that protein's amino acids composition and the long-range interaction-based topological complexity rather than secondary structure contents are the major determinants of protein folding type. Furthermore, a sequence-based folding type prediction achieved an accuracy of more than 80%. These findings implicate that there is no clear boundary between secondary and tertiary structure formation during the protein folding process and support the existence of a continuum of folding mechanism between the two ends of hierarchic and nucleation folding scenarios.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Cell Biology
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