Abstract

A kinetic folding intermediate of hen lysozyme is shown to form in a nucleation/growth type of mechanism. Under native solvent conditions, a nucleated state is formed slowly during refolding (tau = 14 +/- 1 ms at 0 M GdmCl) and is rapidly converted to the folding intermediate (tau = 300 +/- 150 micros at 0 M GdmCl). Under these conditions the nucleated state represents a high-energy state compared to the folding intermediate (delta deltaG0 = 13.7 +/- 3 kJ/mol). At elevated concentrations of GdmCl, the nucleated state becomes more stable than the intermediate and it consequently becomes transiently populated during unfolding of the intermediate state. This allowed us to measure the rate constant of the growth step using stopped-flow double-jump experiments. At high concentrations of GdmCl (>5 M), the growth step becomes rate-limiting in unfolding, leading to the frequently observed rollover in the GdmCl dependence of the logarithm of the apparent rate constant of the unfolding reaction.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call