Accounting for a mirror-image conformation as a subtle effect in protein folding

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Abstract

By using local (free-energy profiles along the amino acid sequence and 13Cα chemical shifts) and global (principal component) analyses to examine the molecular dynamics of protein-folding trajectories, generated with the coarse-grained united-residue force field, for the B domain of staphylococcal protein A, we are able to (i) provide the main reason for formation of the mirror-image conformation of this protein, namely, a slow formation of the second loop and part of the third helix (Asp29-Asn35), caused by the presence of multiple local conformational states in this portion of the protein; (ii) show that formation of the mirror-image topology is a subtle effect resulting from local interactions; (iii) provide a mechanism for how protein A overcomes the barrier between the metastable mirror-image state and the native state; and (iv) offer a plausible reason to explain why protein A does not remain in the metastable mirror-image state even though the mirror-image and native conformations are at least energetically compatible.

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Kachlishvili, K., Maisuradze, G. G., Martin, O. A., Liwo, A., Vila, J. A., & Scheraga, H. A. (2014). Accounting for a mirror-image conformation as a subtle effect in protein folding. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 111(23), 8458–8463. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1407837111

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