Department of Physics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E1, Canada.
Department of Physics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E1, Canada
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Dec 7;118(49). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2101006118.
Biomolecular folding involves searching among myriad possibilities for the native conformation, but the elementary steps expected from theory for this search have never been detected directly. We probed the dynamics of folding at high resolution using optical tweezers, measuring individual trajectories as nucleic acid hairpins passed through the high-energy transition states that dominate kinetics and define folding mechanisms. We observed brief but ubiquitous pauses in the transition states, with a dwell time distribution that matched microscopic theories of folding quantitatively. The sequence dependence suggested that pauses were dominated by microbarriers from nonnative conformations during the search by each nucleotide residue for the native base-pairing conformation. Furthermore, the pauses were position dependent, revealing subtle local variations in energy-landscape roughness and allowing the diffusion coefficient describing the microscopic dynamics within the barrier to be found without reconstructing the shape of the energy landscape. These results show how high-resolution measurements can elucidate key microscopic events during folding to test fundamental theories of folding.
生物分子折叠涉及在无数可能中搜索天然构象,但理论上预期的用于该搜索的基本步骤从未被直接检测到。我们使用光学镊子以高分辨率探测折叠动力学,测量单个轨迹,因为核酸发夹通过主导动力学并定义折叠机制的高能过渡态。我们观察到在过渡态中短暂但普遍存在的停顿,停留时间分布与折叠的微观理论定量匹配。序列依赖性表明,停顿主要是由每个核苷酸残基搜索天然碱基配对构象时来自非天然构象的微观障碍引起的。此外,停顿是位置依赖的,揭示了能量景观粗糙度的细微局部变化,并允许在不重建能量景观形状的情况下找到描述微观动力学的扩散系数。这些结果表明,高分辨率测量如何阐明折叠过程中的关键微观事件,以检验折叠的基本理论。