Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5377285 Chemical Physics 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
The folding/unfolding kinetics of a 16-residue β-hairpin that undergoes cold denaturation at ambient temperatures were investigated by time-resolved infrared spectroscopy coupled with the laser-induced temperature jump (T-jump) initiation method. We found that the relaxation kinetics of this β-hairpin following a T-jump, obtained by probing the amide I′ band of the peptide backbone, show strange temperature dependence. At temperatures below approximately 35 °C where this β-hairpin mainly exhibits cold denaturation, the T-jump induced relaxation rate is ∼5 μs−1, whereas at temperatures where heat denaturation takes place, the relaxation rate increases to ∼1 μs−1. These results cannot be readily explained by a two-state folding model that has been used to describe the folding thermodynamics of this β-hairpin. In addition, these results suggest that the folding free energy barrier separating the cold-denatured state from the folded state is different from that separating the heat-denatured state from the folded state, coinciding with the idea that the mechanism leading to cold denaturation is different from that leading to heat denaturation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
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