Abstract

One of the purposes of studying protein stability changes upon mutations is to get information about the dominating interactions that drive folding and stabilise the native structure. With this in mind, we present a method that predicts folding free-energy variations caused by point mutations using combinations of two types of database-derived potentials, i.e. backbone torsion-angle potentials and distance potentials, describing local and non-local interactions along the chain, respectively. The method is applied to evaluate the folding free-energy changes of 344 single-site mutations introduced in six different proteins and a synthetic peptide. We found that the relative importance of local versus non-local interactions along the chain is essentially a function of the solvent accessibility of the mutated residues. For the subset of totally buried residues, the optimal potential is the sum of a distance potential and a torsion potential weighted by a factor of 0.4. This combination yields a correlation coefficient between measured and computed changes in folding free energy of 0.80. For mutations of partially buried residues, the best potential is the sum of a torsion potential and a distance potential weighted by 0.7. For fully accessible residues, the torsion potentials taken alone perform best, reaching correlation coefficients of 0.87 on all but 10 mutations; the excluded mutations seem to modify the backbone structure or to involve interactions that are atypical for the surface. These results show that the relative weight of non-local interactions along the sequence decreases as the solvent accessibility of the mutated residue increases, and vanishes at the protein surface. On the contrary, the weight of local interactions increases with solvent accessibility. The latter interactions are nevertheless never negligible, even for the most buried residues.

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