28 research outputs found

    Unfolding dynamics of proteins under applied force

    Get PDF
    Understanding the mechanisms of protein folding is a major challenge that is being addressed effectively by collaboration between researchers in the physical and life sciences. Recently, it has become possible to mechanically unfold proteins by pulling on their two termini using local force probes such as the atomic force microscope. Here, we present data from experiments in which synthetic protein polymers designed to mimic naturally occurring polyproteins have been mechanically unfolded. For many years protein folding dynamics have been studied using chemical denaturation, and we therefore firstly discuss our mechanical unfolding data in the context of such experiments and show that the two unfolding mechanisms are not the same, at least for the proteins studied here. We also report unexpected observations that indicate a history effect in the observed unfolding forces of polymeric proteins and explain this in terms of the changing number of domains remaining to unfold and the increasing compliance of the lengthening unstructured polypeptide chain produced each time a domain unfolds

    Time-resolved crystallography using the Hadamard transform

    Get PDF
    YesWe describe a method for performing time-resolved X-ray crystallographic experiments based on the Hadamard transform, in which time resolution is defined by the underlying periodicity of the probe pulse sequence, and signal/noise is greatly improved over that for the fastest pump-probe experiments depending on a single pulse. This approach should be applicable on standard synchrotron beamlines and will enable high-resolution measurements of protein and small-molecule structural dynamics. It is also applicable to other time-resolved measurements where a probe can be encoded, such as pump-probe spectroscopy.Wellcome Trust 4-year PhD program “The Molecular Basis of Biological Mechanisms” 089312/Z/09/Z. This work was also supported by the EPSRC Award “Dynamic Structural Science at the Research Complex at Harwell” EP/I01974X/1 and by BBSRC Award BB/H001905/1

    Switching two-state to three-state kinetics in the helical protein Im9 via the optimisation of stabilising non-native interactions by design

    No full text
    The four-helix protein Im7 folds through an on-pathway intermediate at pH 7.0 and 10 8C. By contrast, under these conditions there is no evidence for a populated intermediate in the folding of its more stable homologue, Im9, even in the presence of 0.4 M sodium sulphate. Previous studies using F-value analysis have shown that the Im7 intermediate is misfolded, in that three of its four native helices are formed, but are docked in a non-native manner. Using knowledge of the structure of the intermediate of Im7, we have used rational design to stabilise an intermediate formed during the folding of Im9 by the introduction of specific stabilising interactions at positions known to stabilise the Im7 folding intermediate through nonnative interactions. We show that the redesigned Im9 sequence folds with three-state kinetics at pH 7.0 and have used F-value analysis to demonstrate that this species resembles the misfolded intermediate populated during Im7 folding. The redesigned Im9 sequence folds 20-fold faster than the wild-type protein under conditions in which folding is two-state. The data show that intermediate formation is an important feature of folding, even for small proteins such as Im9 for which these partially folded states do not become significantly populated. In addition, they show that the introduction of stabilising interactions can lead to rapid refolding, even when the contacts introduced are non-native

    CCDC 215839: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination

    No full text
    An entry from the Cambridge Structural Database, the world’s repository for small molecule crystal structures. The entry contains experimental data from a crystal diffraction study. The deposited dataset for this entry is freely available from the CCDC and typically includes 3D coordinates, cell parameters, space group, experimental conditions and quality measures

    Synthesis and Photochemistry of a New Class of Photocleavable Protein Cross-linking Reagents

    No full text
    A new series of photocleavable protein cross-linking reagents based on bis(maleimide) derivatives of diaryl disulficles have been synthesised. They have been functionalised with cysteine and transient absorption spectra for the photolysis reaction have been recorded by using the pump-probe technique with a time resolution of 100 femtoseconds. Photolysis of the disulfide bond yields the corresponding thiyl radicals in less than a picosecond. There is a significant amount of geminate recombination, but some of the radicals escape the solvent cage and the quantum yield for photocleavage is 30% in water

    Alternating high-voltage biasing for terahertz large-area photoconductive emitters

    No full text
    High-voltage biasing is necessary for efficient generation of terahertz radiation using large-area photoconductive emitters and for electric-field-oriented charge-transfer studies. Coherent detection of terahertz pulses allows ac biasing to be the basis of modulation for lock-in detection. Biasing emitters with an ac field also removes the need for a complete conduction path. The experimental advantages of this approach along with a simple resonant method of generating the high-voltage bias applicable to higher-repetition-rate (up to a few hundred kilohertz) regeneratively amplified systems are described. (c) 2006 American Institute of Physics
    corecore