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Models of cooperativity in protein folding

  • University of California at San Francisco

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

110 Scopus citations

Abstract

What is the basis for the two-state cooperativity of protein folding? Since the 1950s, three main models have been put forward. 1. In 'helix-coil' theory, cooperativity is due to local interactions among near neighbours in the sequence. Helix-coil cooperativity is probably not the principal basis for the folding of globular proteins because it is not two-state, the forces are weak, it does not account for sheet proteins, and there is no evidence that helix formation precedes the formation of a hydrophobic core in the folding pathways. 2. In the 'sidechain packing' model, cooperativity is attributed to the jigsaw-puzzle-like complementary fits of sidechains. This too is probably not the basis of folding cooperativity because exact models and experiments on homopolymers with sidechains give no evidence that sidechain freezing is twostate, sidechain complementarities in proteins are only weak trends, and the molten globule model predicted by this model is far more native-like than experiments indicate. 3. In the 'hydrophobic core collapse' model, cooperativity is due to the assembly of non-polar residues into a good core. Exact model studies show that this model gives two-state behaviour for some sequences of hydrophobic and polar monomers. It is based on strong forces. There is considerable experimental evidence for the kinetics this model predicts: the development of hydrophobic clusters and cores is concurrent with secondary structure formation. It predicts compact denatured states with sizes and degrees of disorder that are in reasonable agreement with experiments.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)61-70
Number of pages10
JournalPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume348
Issue number1323
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 1995

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