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Published online before print May 29, 2008
Protein Science, DOI: 10.1110/ps.035105.108
Copyright © 2008 The Protein Society
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Early events in protein folding: is there something more than hydrophobic burst?

Carlo Camilloni1, Ludovico Sutto2, Davide Provasi2, Guido Tiana2,3, and Ricardo A Broglia2

1 Universita' degli studi di Milano;
2 University of Milano

(RECEIVED February 25, 2008; ACCEPTED May 9, 2008)

The presence of native contacts in the denatured state of many proteins suggests that elements of the biologically active structure of these molecules are formed during the initial stage of the folding process. The rapidity with which these events take place makes it difficult to study them in vitro but by the same token, suitable for studies in silico. With the help of all-atom, explicit solvent, molecular dynamics simulations we have followed in time, starting from elongated structureless conformations, the early events in the folding of src-SH3 domain and of proteins G, L and CI2. It is observed that within the first 50 ns two important events take place, essentially independent of each other: hydrophobic collapse and formation of few selected native contacts. The same contacts are also found in simulations carried out in presence of guanidinium chloride in order to reproduce the conditions used to characterize experimentally the denatured state, and testify to the fact that these contacts are to be considered a resilient characterizing property of the denaturated state.

Keywords: Protein Structure/Folding; Molecular mechanics/dynamics


3 E-mail: tiana{at}mi.infn.it


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