Protein Folding Mechanism of the Dimeric AmphiphysinII/Bin1 N-BAR Domain.

The human AmphyphisinII/Bin1 N-BAR domain belongs to the BAR domain superfamily, whose members sense and generate membrane curvatures. The N-BAR domain is a 57 kDa homodimeric protein comprising a six helix bundle. Here we report the protein folding mechanism of this protein as a representative of t...

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Main Authors: Tobias Gruber, Jochen Balbach
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4569573?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ef175fca0eb3445f9ac7e35f3bc9e2ab2020-11-24T21:27:22ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01109e013692210.1371/journal.pone.0136922Protein Folding Mechanism of the Dimeric AmphiphysinII/Bin1 N-BAR Domain.Tobias GruberJochen BalbachThe human AmphyphisinII/Bin1 N-BAR domain belongs to the BAR domain superfamily, whose members sense and generate membrane curvatures. The N-BAR domain is a 57 kDa homodimeric protein comprising a six helix bundle. Here we report the protein folding mechanism of this protein as a representative of this protein superfamily. The concentration dependent thermodynamic stability was studied by urea equilibrium transition curves followed by fluorescence and far-UV CD spectroscopy. Kinetic unfolding and refolding experiments, including rapid double and triple mixing techniques, allowed to unravel the complex folding behavior of N-BAR. The equilibrium unfolding transition curve can be described by a two-state process, while the folding kinetics show four refolding phases, an additional burst reaction and two unfolding phases. All fast refolding phases show a rollover in the chevron plot but only one of these phases depends on the protein concentration reporting the dimerization step. Secondary structure formation occurs during the three fast refolding phases. The slowest phase can be assigned to a proline isomerization. All kinetic experiments were also followed by fluorescence anisotropy detection to verify the assignment of the dimerization step to the respective folding phase. Based on these experiments we propose for N-BAR two parallel folding pathways towards the homodimeric native state depending on the proline conformation in the unfolded state.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4569573?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tobias Gruber
Jochen Balbach
spellingShingle Tobias Gruber
Jochen Balbach
Protein Folding Mechanism of the Dimeric AmphiphysinII/Bin1 N-BAR Domain.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Tobias Gruber
Jochen Balbach
author_sort Tobias Gruber
title Protein Folding Mechanism of the Dimeric AmphiphysinII/Bin1 N-BAR Domain.
title_short Protein Folding Mechanism of the Dimeric AmphiphysinII/Bin1 N-BAR Domain.
title_full Protein Folding Mechanism of the Dimeric AmphiphysinII/Bin1 N-BAR Domain.
title_fullStr Protein Folding Mechanism of the Dimeric AmphiphysinII/Bin1 N-BAR Domain.
title_full_unstemmed Protein Folding Mechanism of the Dimeric AmphiphysinII/Bin1 N-BAR Domain.
title_sort protein folding mechanism of the dimeric amphiphysinii/bin1 n-bar domain.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The human AmphyphisinII/Bin1 N-BAR domain belongs to the BAR domain superfamily, whose members sense and generate membrane curvatures. The N-BAR domain is a 57 kDa homodimeric protein comprising a six helix bundle. Here we report the protein folding mechanism of this protein as a representative of this protein superfamily. The concentration dependent thermodynamic stability was studied by urea equilibrium transition curves followed by fluorescence and far-UV CD spectroscopy. Kinetic unfolding and refolding experiments, including rapid double and triple mixing techniques, allowed to unravel the complex folding behavior of N-BAR. The equilibrium unfolding transition curve can be described by a two-state process, while the folding kinetics show four refolding phases, an additional burst reaction and two unfolding phases. All fast refolding phases show a rollover in the chevron plot but only one of these phases depends on the protein concentration reporting the dimerization step. Secondary structure formation occurs during the three fast refolding phases. The slowest phase can be assigned to a proline isomerization. All kinetic experiments were also followed by fluorescence anisotropy detection to verify the assignment of the dimerization step to the respective folding phase. Based on these experiments we propose for N-BAR two parallel folding pathways towards the homodimeric native state depending on the proline conformation in the unfolded state.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4569573?pdf=render
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