Skip NavigationSkip to Content

Hydrophobic Folding Units At Protein-Protein Interfaces - Implications to Protein Folding and to Protein-Protein Association

  1. Author:
    Tsai, C. J.
    Nussinov, R.
  2. Author Address

    Nussinov R NCI FREDERICK CANC RES & DEV CTR MATH BIOL LAB IRSP SAIC BLDG 469 ROOM 151 FREDERICK, MD 21702 USA NCI FREDERICK CANC RES & DEV CTR MATH BIOL LAB IRSP SAIC FREDERICK, MD 21702 USA TEL AVIV UNIV SACKLER INST MOL MED IL-69978 TEL AVIV ISRAEL
    1. Year: 1997
  1. Journal: Protein Science
    1. 6
    2. 7
    3. Pages: 1426-1437
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    A hydrophobic folding unit cutting algorithm, originally developed for dissecting single-chain proteins, has been applied to a dataset of dissimilar two-chain protein-protein interfaces. Rather than consider each individual chain separately, the two-chain complex has been treated as a single chain. The two-chain parsing results presented in this work show hydrophobicity to be a critical attribute of two-state versus three-state protein-protein complexes, The hydrophobic folding units at the interfaces of two-state complexes suggest that the cooperative nature of the two-chain protein folding is the outcome of the hydrophobic effect, similar to its being the driving force in a single-chain folding. In analogy to the protein-folding process, the two-chain, two-state model complex may correspond to the formation of compact, hydrophobic nuclei. On the other hand, the three-state model complex involves binding of already folded monomers. similar to the association of the hydrophobic folding units within a single chain. The similarity between folding entities in protein cores and in two-state protein-protein interfaces, despite the absence of some chain connectivities in the latter, indicates that chain linkage does not necessarily affect the native conformation This further substantiates the notion that tertiary, non-local interactions play a critical role in protein folding. These compact, hydrophobic, two-chain folding units, derived from structurally dissimilar protein-protein interfaces, provide a rich set of data useful in investigations of the role played by chain connectivity and by tertiary interactions in studies of binding and of folding. Since they are composed of non-contiguous pieces of protein backbones, they may also aid in defining folding nuclei. [References: 48]

    See More

External Sources

  1. No sources found.

Library Notes

  1. No notes added.
NCI at Frederick

You are leaving a government website.

This external link provides additional information that is consistent with the intended purpose of this site. The government cannot attest to the accuracy of a non-federal site.

Linking to a non-federal site does not constitute an endorsement by this institution or any of its employees of the sponsors or the information and products presented on the site. You will be subject to the destination site's privacy policy when you follow the link.

ContinueCancel