Fast kinetic experiments with dramatically improved time resolution have contributed significantly to understanding the fundamental processes in protein folding pathways involving the formation of a-helices and b-hairpin, contact formation, and overall collapse of the peptide chain. Interpretation of experimental results through application of a simple statistical mechanical model was key to this understanding. Atomistic description of all events observed in the experimental findings was challenging. Recent advancements in theory, more sophisticated algorithms, and a true long-term trajectory made way for an atomically detailed description of kinetics, examining folding pathways, validating experimental results, and reporting new findings for a wide range of molecular processes in biophysical chemistry. This review describes how optimum dimensionality reduction theory can construct a simplified coarse-grained model with low dimensionality involving a kinetic matrix that captures novel insights into folding pathways. A set of metastable states derived from molecular dynamics analysis generate an optimally reduced dimensionality rate matrix following transition pathway analysis. Analysis of the actual long-term simulation trajectory extracts a relaxation time directly comparable to the experimental results and confirms the validity of the combined approach. The application of the theory is discussed and illustrated using several examples of helix <==> coil transition pathways. This paper focuses primarily on a combined approach of time-resolved experiments and long-term molecular dynamics simulation from our ongoing work.
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Length Dependent Folding Kinetics of Alanine-Based Helical Peptides from Optimal Dimensionality Reduction
We present a computer simulation study of helix folding in alanine homopeptides (ALA)n of length n = 5, 8, 15, and 21 residues. Based on multi-microsecond molecular dynamics simulations at room temperature, we found helix populations and relaxation times increasing from about 6% and ~2 ns for ALA5 to about 60% and ~500 ns for ALA21, and folding free energies decreasing linearly with the increasing number of residues. The helix folding was analyzed with the Optimal Dimensionality Reduction method, yielding coarse-grained kinetic models that provided a detailed representation of the folding process. The shorter peptides, ALA5 and ALA8, tended to convert directly from coil to helix, while ALA15 and ALA21 traveled through several intermediates. Coarse-grained aggregate states representing the helix, coil, and intermediates were heterogeneous, encompassing multiple peptide conformations. The folding involved multiple pathways and interesting intermediate states were present on the folding paths, with partially formed helices, turns, and compact coils. Statistically, helix initiation was favored at both termini, and the helix was most stable in the central region. Importantly, we found the presence of underlying universal local dynamics in helical peptides with correlated transitions for neighboring hydrogen bonds. Overall, the structural and dynamical parameters extracted from the trajectories are in good agreement with experimental observables, providing microscopic insights into the complex helix folding kinetics.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1807852
- PAR ID:
- 10283529
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Life
- Volume:
- 11
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 2075-1729
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 385
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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