Luan Qing, Clark Patricia L
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Aug 5;122(31):e2425999122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2425999122. Epub 2025 Jul 30.
Our current understanding of protein folding is based predominantly on studies of small (<150 aa) proteins that refold reversibly from a chemically denatured state. However, as protein length increases so does the competition between off-pathway misfolding and on-pathway folding, creating a more complex energy landscape ("folding funnel"). Little is known about how intermediates populated during the folding of larger proteins affect navigation of this more complex landscape. Previously, we reported extremely slow folding rates for the 539 aa β-helical passenger domain of pertactin (P.69T), including conditions that favor the formation of a kinetically trapped, off-pathway partially folded state (PFS). Existence of an on-pathway intermediate for P.69T folding was speculated but its characterization remained elusive. In this work, we exploited the extremely slow kinetics of PFS unfolding to develop a double-jump "denaturant challenge" assay. With this assay, we identified a transient unfolding intermediate, PFS*, that adopts a similar structure to PFS, including C-terminal folded structure and a disordered N terminus, yet unfolds much more quickly than PFS. Additional experiments revealed that PFS* also functions as an on-pathway intermediate for P.69T folding. Collectively, these results support a C-to-N-terminal model for P.69T folding, with folding initiated in the C-terminus with the rate-limiting formation of the transient on-pathway PFS* intermediate, which sits at the junction of the kinetic competition between folding and misfolding. Notably, processive folding from C-to-N terminus also occurs during C-to-N-terminal translocation of P.69T across the bacterial outer membrane. These results illuminate the crucial role of kinetics when navigating a complex energy landscape for protein folding.
我们目前对蛋白质折叠的理解主要基于对小分子(<150个氨基酸)蛋白质的研究,这些蛋白质能从化学变性状态可逆地重新折叠。然而,随着蛋白质长度的增加,错误折叠的非天然途径与正确折叠的天然途径之间的竞争也会加剧,从而产生更复杂的能量景观(“折叠漏斗”)。对于较大蛋白质折叠过程中出现的中间体如何影响这种更复杂景观中的折叠途径,我们了解甚少。此前,我们报道了百日咳杆菌黏附素(P.69T)的539个氨基酸的β-螺旋乘客结构域折叠速度极慢,包括有利于形成动力学捕获的、非天然途径的部分折叠状态(PFS)的条件。有人推测P.69T折叠存在一个天然途径中间体,但其特征仍不明确。在这项工作中,我们利用PFS解折叠的极慢动力学,开发了一种双跳跃“变性剂挑战”测定法。通过这种测定法,我们鉴定出一种瞬时解折叠中间体PFS*,它与PFS具有相似的结构,包括C端折叠结构和无序的N端,但解折叠速度比PFS快得多。进一步的实验表明,PFS也是P.69T折叠的天然途径中间体。总的来说,这些结果支持了P.69T折叠的从C端到N端的模型,即折叠从C端开始,限速步骤是形成瞬时的天然途径PFS中间体,它位于折叠和错误折叠的动力学竞争的交界处。值得注意的是,在P.69T跨细菌外膜从C端到N端的转运过程中,也发生了从C端到N端的连续折叠。这些结果揭示了在蛋白质折叠的复杂能量景观中导航时动力学的关键作用。