Fast Events in Protein Folding:  Helix Melting and Formation in a Small Peptide

Skip Williams(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Timothy P. Causgrove(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Rudolf Gilmanshin(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Karen S. Fang(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Robert Callender(City College of New York), William H. Woodruff(City University of New York), R. Brian Dyer(Mississippi University for Women)
Biochemistry
January 1, 1996
Cited by 554

Abstract

The helix is a common secondary structural motif found in proteins, and the mechanism of helix-coil interconversion is key to understanding the protein-folding problem. We report the observation of the fast kinetics (nanosecond to millisecond) of helix melting in a small 21-residue alanine-based peptide. The unfolding reaction is initiated using a laser-induced temperature jump and probed using time-resolved infrared spectroscopy. The model peptide exhibits fast unfolding kinetics with a time constant of 160 +/- 60 ns at 28 degrees C in response to a laser-induced temperature jump of 18 degrees C which is completed within 20 ns. Using the unfolding time and the measured helix-coil equilibrium constant of the model peptide, a folding rate constant of approximately 6 x 10(7) s-1 (t1/2 = 16 ns) can be inferred for the helix formation reaction at 28 degrees C. These results demonstrate that secondary structure formation is fast enough to be a key event at early times in the protein-folding process and that helices are capable of forming before long range tertiary contacts are made.


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