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Nature Research, Nature Chemical Biology, 12(11), p. 981-987, 2015

DOI: 10.1038/nchembio.1939

Biophysical Society, Biophysical Journal, 3(110), p. 191a

DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2015.11.1063

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Mapping the energy landscape for second-stage folding of a single membrane protein

Journal article published in 2015 by Duyoung Min, Robert E. Jefferson ORCID, James U. Bowie, Tae-Young Yoon
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Membrane proteins are designed to fold and function in a lipid membrane, yet folding experiments within a native membrane environment are challenging to design. Here we show that single-molecule forced unfolding experiments can be adapted to study helical membrane protein folding under native-like bicelle conditions. Applying force using magnetic tweezers, we find that a transmembrane helix protein, Escherichia coli rhomboid protease GlpG, unfolds in a highly cooperative manner, largely unraveling as one physical unit in response to mechanical tension above 25 pN. Considerable hysteresis is observed, with refolding occurring only at forces below 5 pN. Characterizing the energy landscape reveals only modest thermodynamic stability (ΔG = 6.5 kBT) but a large unfolding barrier (21.3 kBT) that can maintain the protein in a folded state for long periods of time (t1/2 ∼3.5 h). The observed energy landscape may have evolved to limit the existence of troublesome partially unfolded states and impart rigidity to the structure.