Multiple routes and structural heterogeneity in protein folding

Udgaonkar, Jayant B. (2008) Multiple routes and structural heterogeneity in protein folding Annual Review of Biophysics, 37 . pp. 489-510. ISSN 1936-122X

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Official URL: http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annur...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev.biophys.37.032807.125920

Abstract

Experimental studies show that many proteins fold along sequential pathways defined by folding intermediates. An intermediate may not always be a single population of molecules but may consist of subpopulations that differ in their average structure. These subpopulations are likely to fold via independent pathways. Parallel folding and unfolding pathways appear to arise because of structural heterogeneity. For some proteins, the folding pathways can effectively switch either because different subpopulations of an intermediate get populated under different folding conditions, or because intermediates on otherwise hidden pathways get stabilized, leading to their utilization becoming discernible, or because mutations stabilize different substructures. Therefore, the same protein may fold via different pathways in different folding conditions. Multiple folding pathways make folding robust, and evolution is likely to have selected for this robustness to ensure that a protein will fold under the varying conditions prevalent in different cellular contexts.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Annual Reviews.
Keywords:Folding Pathways; Folding Intermediates; Competing Pathways; Protein Unfolding
ID Code:54290
Deposited On:11 Aug 2011 12:17
Last Modified:11 Aug 2011 12:17

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