TY - JOUR T1 - Dynamic Monte Carlo simulations of globular protein folding/unfolding pathways: I. Six-member, Greek Key beta-Barrel proteins JF - Journal of Molecular Biology Y1 - 1990 A1 - Jeffrey Skolnick A1 - Andrzej KoliƄski AB - In the context of a simplified diamond lattice model of a six-member, Greek key beta-barrel protein that is closely related in topology to plastocyanin, the nature of the folding and unfolding pathways have been investigated using dynamic Monte Carlo techniques. The mechanism of Greek key assembly is best described as punctuated "on site construction". Folding typically starts at or near a beta-turn, and then the beta-strands sequentially form by using existing folded structure as a scaffold onto which subsequent tertiary structure assembles. On average, beta-strands tend to zip up from one tight bend to the next. After the four-member, beta-barrel assembles, there is a long pause as the random coil portion of the chain containing the long loop thrahes about trying to find the native state. Thus, there is an entropic barrier that must be surmounted. However, while a given piece of the protein may be folding, another section may be unfolding. A competition therefore exists to assemble a fairly stable intermediate before it dissolves. Folding may initiate at any of the tight turns, but the turn closer to the N terminus seems to be preferred due to well-known excluded volume effects. When the protein first starts to fold, there are a multiplicity of folding pathways, but the number of options is reduced as the system gets closer to the native state. In the early stages, the excluded volume effect exerted by the already assembled protein helps subsequent assembly. Then, near the native conformation, the folded parts reduce the accessible conformational space available to the remaining unfolded sections. Unfolding essentially occurs in reverse. Employing a simple statistical mechanical theory, the configurational free energy along the reaction co-ordinate for this model has been constructed. The free energy surface, in agreement with the simulations, provides the following predictions. The transition state is quite near the native state, and consists of five of the six beta-strands being fully assembled, with the remaining long loop plus sixth beta-strand in place, but only partially assembled. It is separated from the beta-barrel intermediate by a free energy barrier of mainly entropic origin and from the native state by a barrier that is primarily energetic in origin. The latter feature is in agreement with the "Cardboard Box" model described by Goldenberg and Creighton but, unlike their model, the transition state is not a high-energy distorted form of the native state. VL - 212 UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/002228369090238H ER -