STRUCTURE OF THE TRANSITION-STATE FOR THE FOLDING UNFOLDING OF THE BARLEY CHYMOTRYPSIN INHIBITOR-2 AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR MECHANISMS OF PROTEIN-FOLDING/
De. Otzen et al., STRUCTURE OF THE TRANSITION-STATE FOR THE FOLDING UNFOLDING OF THE BARLEY CHYMOTRYPSIN INHIBITOR-2 AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR MECHANISMS OF PROTEIN-FOLDING/, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United Statesof America, 91(22), 1994, pp. 10422-10425
The equilibrium and kinetics of folding of the single-domain protein c
hymotrypsin inhibitor 2 conform to the simple two-state model. The str
ucture of the rate-determining transition state has been mapped out at
the resolution of individual side chains by using the protein enginee
ring method on 74 mutants that have been constructed at 37 of the 64 r
esidues. The structure contains no elements of secondary structure tha
t are fully formed. The majority of interactions are weakened by >50%
in the transition state, although most regions do have some very weak
structure. The structure of the transition state appears to be an expa
nded form of the native state in which secondary and tertiary elements
have been partly formed concurrently. This is consistent with a ''glo
bal collapse'' model of folding rather than a framework model in which
folding is initiated from fully preformed local secondary structural
elements. This may be a general feature for the folding of proteins la
cking a folding intermediate and is perhaps representative of the earl
y stages of folding for multidomain or multimodule proteins. The major
transition state for the folding of barnase, for example, has some fu
lly formed secondary and tertiary structural elements in the major tra
nsition state, and barnase appears to form by a framework process. How
ever, the fully formed framework may be preceded by a global collapse,
and a unified folding scheme is presented.