Abstract

Acylphosphatase (AcP) is a small protein with 98 amino acid residues that catalyzes the hydrolysis of carboxyl-phosphate bonds. AcP is a typical two-state protein with slow folding rate due to its relatively large contact order in the native structure. The mechanical properties and unfolding behavior of AcP has been studied by atomic force microscope. Here using stable magnetic tweezers, we measured the force-dependent folding rates within a force range 1-3 pN, and unfolding rates 15-40 pN. The obtained unfolding rates show different force sensitivities at forces below and above ∼27 pN, which determines a free-energy landscape with two energy barriers. Our results indicate that the free-energy landscape of small globule proteins have general Bactrian camel shape, and large contact order of the native state produces a high barrier dominate at low forces.

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