Abstract
We have carried out molecular dynamics simulations of the native dihydrofolate reductase from Escherichia coli and several of its folded protein fragments at standard temperature. The simulations have shown fragments 1--36, 37--88, and 89--159 to be unstable, with a C(alpha)RMSD (C(alpha) root mean squared deviation) >5 A after 3.0 nsec of simulation. The unfolding of fragment 1--36 was immediate, whereas fragments 37--88 and 89--159 gradually unfolded because of the presence of the beta-sheet core structure. In the absence of residues 1--36, the two distinct domains comprising fragment 39--159 associated with each other, resulting in a stable conformation. This conformation retained most of its native structural elements. We have further simulated fragments derived from computational protein cutting. These were also found to be unstable, with the exception of fragment 104--159. In the absence of alpha(4), the loose loop region of residues 120--127 exhibited a beta-strand-like behavior, associating itself with the beta-sheet core of the protein fragment. The current study suggests that the folding of dihydrofolate reductase involves cooperative folding of distinct domains which otherwise would have been unstable as independent folded units in solution. Finally, the critical role of residues 1--36 in allowing the two distinct domains of fragment 104--159 to fold into the final native conformation is discussed.
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More From: Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society
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