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Revealing the bifurcation in the unfolding pathways of GFP by using single-molecule experiments and simulations

  • Moritz Mickler
  • , Ruxandra I. Dima
  • , Hendrik Dietz
  • , Changbong Hyeon
  • , D. Thirumalai
  • , Matthias Rief
  • Technical University of Munich
  • Univ. of Cincinnati
  • University of California, San Diego
  • Chung-Ang University
  • University of Maryland
  • Center for Integrated Protein Science

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

134 Scopus citations

Abstract

Nanomanipulation of biomolecules by using single-molecule methods and computer simulations has made it possible to visualize the energy landscape of biomolecules and the structures that are sampled during the folding process. We use simulations and single-molecule force spectroscopy to map the complex energy landscape of GFP that is used as a marker in cell biology and biotechnology. By engineering internal disulfide bonds at selected positions in the GFP structure, mechanical unfolding routes are precisely controlled, thus allowing us to infer features of the energy landscape of the wild-type GFP. To elucidate the structures of the unfolding pathways and reveal the multiple unfolding routes, the experimental results are complemented with simulations of a self-organized polymer (SOP) model of GFP. The SOP representation of proteins, which is a coarse-grained description of biomolecules, allows us to perform forced-induced simulations at loading rates and time scales that closely match those used in atomic force microscopy experiments. By using the combined approach, we show that forced unfolding of GFP involves a bifurcation in the pathways to the stretched state. After detachment of an N-terminal α-helix, unfolding proceeds along two distinct pathways. In the dominant pathway, unfolding starts from the detachment of the primary N-terminal β-strand, while in the minor pathway rupture of the last, C-terminal β-strand initiates the unfolding process. The combined approach has allowed us to map the features of the complex energy landscape of GFP including a characterization of the structures, albeit at a coarse-grained level, of the three metastable intermediates.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)20268-20273
Number of pages6
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume104
Issue number51
DOIs
StatePublished - 18 Dec 2007

Keywords

  • AFM experiments
  • Coarse-grained simulations
  • Cross-link mutants
  • Pathway bifurcation
  • Plasticity of energy landscape

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