Premium
Folding of Top7 in unbiased all‐atom Monte Carlo simulations
Author(s) -
Mohanty Sandipan,
Meinke Jan H.,
Zimmermann Olav
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
proteins: structure, function, and bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.699
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1097-0134
pISSN - 0887-3585
DOI - 10.1002/prot.24295
Subject(s) - lattice protein , protein secondary structure , monte carlo method , protein folding , parallel tempering , contact order , chemistry , native state , folding (dsp implementation) , crystallography , protein data bank (rcsb pdb) , chemical physics , downhill folding , protein structure prediction , protein structure , phi value analysis , stereochemistry , mathematics , hybrid monte carlo , electrical engineering , markov chain monte carlo , engineering , biochemistry , statistics
For computational studies of protein folding, proteins with both helical and β‐sheet secondary structure elements are very challenging, as they expose subtle biases of the physical models. Here, we present reproducible folding of a 92 residue α/β protein (residues 3–94 of Top7, PDB ID: 1QYS) in computer simulations starting from random initial conformations using a transferable physical model which has been previously shown to describe the folding and thermodynamic properties of about 20 other smaller proteins of different folds. Top7 is a de novo designed protein with two α‐helices and a five stranded β‐sheet. Experimentally, it is known to be unusually stable for its size, and its folding transition distinctly deviates from the two‐state behavior commonly seen in natural single domain proteins. In our all‐atom implicit solvent parallel tempering Monte Carlo simulations, Top7 shows a rapid transition to a group of states with high native‐like secondary structure, and a much slower subsequent transition to the native state with a root mean square deviation of about 3.5 Å from the experimentally determined structure. Consistent with experiments, we find Top7 to be thermally extremely stable, although the simulations also find a large number of very stable non‐native states with high native‐like secondary structure. Proteins 2013; 81:1446–1456. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.