Jose R Tusell, Patrik R Callis
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59717-3400, USA.
The journal of physical chemistry. B 2012 Mar 1Protein folding kinetics is commonly monitored by changes in tryptophan (Trp) fluorescence intensity. Considerable recent discussion has centered on whether the fluorescence of the single Trp in the much-studied, fast-folding villin headpiece C-terminal domain (HP35) accurately reflects folding kinetics, given the general view that quenching is by a histidine cation (His(+)) one turn away in an α-helix (helix III) that forms early in the folding process, according to published MD simulations. To help answer this question, we ran 1.0 μs MD simulations on HP35 (N27H) and a faster-folding variant in its folded form at 300 K and used the coordinates and force field charges with quantum calculations to simulate fluorescence quenching caused by electron transfer to the local amide and to the His(+). The simulations demonstrate that quenching by His(+) in the fully formed helix III is possible only during certain Trp and His(+) rotamer and solvent conformations, the propensity of which is a variable that can allow Trp fluorescence to report the global folding rate, as recent experiments imply.
Jose R Tusell, Patrik R Callis. Simulations of tryptophan fluorescence dynamics during folding of the villin headpiece. The journal of physical chemistry. B. 2012 Mar 1;116(8):2586-94
PMID: 22256973
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