Energy landscape underlying spontaneous insertion and folding of an alpha-helical transmembrane protein into a bilayer

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Abstract

Membrane protein folding mechanisms and rates are notoriously hard to determine. A recent force spectroscopy study of the folding of an α-helical membrane protein, GlpG, showed that the folded state has a very high kinetic stability and a relatively low thermodynamic stability. Here, we simulate the spontaneous insertion and folding of GlpG into a bilayer. An energy landscape analysis of the simulations suggests that GlpG folds via sequential insertion of helical hairpins. The rate-limiting step involves simultaneous insertion and folding of the final helical hairpin. The striking features of GlpG’s experimentally measured landscape can therefore be explained by a partially inserted metastable state, which leads us to a reinterpretation of the rates measured by force spectroscopy. Our results are consistent with the helical hairpin hypothesis but call into question the two-stage model of membrane protein folding as a general description of folding mechanisms in the presence of bilayers.

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Lu, W., Schafer, N. P., & Wolynes, P. G. (2018). Energy landscape underlying spontaneous insertion and folding of an alpha-helical transmembrane protein into a bilayer. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-07320-9

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