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Ultrafast folding kinetics of WW domains reveal how the amino acid sequence determines the speed limit to protein folding
Edited by Martin Gruebele, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, Urbana, IL, and approved March 19, 2019 (received for review January 5, 2019)

Significance
Natural proteins fold and unfold with rates that define their biological properties and vary vastly from protein to protein. A major fundamental question refers to how fast a protein can possibly fold, how does this limit compare with chemical reaction rates, and whether it is universal or depends on the protein’s chemical properties. We apply ultrafast kinetic methods to investigate five proteins that share the simplest all-β fold but have different amino acid sequence. In these studies, we measure the folding speed limit for each one of them and discover rather substantial differences. Our results shed light onto the fundamentals of biomolecular rate theory and onto our general understanding of how proteins fold, function, and evolve.
Abstract
Protein (un)folding rates depend on the free-energy barrier separating the native and unfolded states and a prefactor term, which sets the timescale for crossing such barrier or folding speed limit. Because extricating these two factors is usually unfeasible, it has been common to assume a constant prefactor and assign all rate variability to the barrier. However, theory and simulations postulate a protein-specific prefactor that contains key mechanistic information. Here, we exploit the special properties of fast-folding proteins to experimentally resolve the folding rate prefactor and investigate how much it varies among structural homologs. We measure the ultrafast (un)folding kinetics of five natural WW domains using nanosecond laser-induced temperature jumps. All five WW domains fold in microseconds, but with a 10-fold difference between fastest and slowest. Interestingly, they all produce biphasic kinetics in which the slower phase corresponds to reequilibration over the small barrier (<3 RT) and the faster phase to the downhill relaxation of the minor population residing at the barrier top [transition state ensemble (TSE)]. The fast rate recapitulates the 10-fold range, demonstrating that the folding speed limit of even the simplest all-β fold strongly depends on the amino acid sequence. Given this fold’s simplicity, the most plausible source for such prefactor differences is the presence of nonnative interactions that stabilize the TSE but need to break up before folding resumes. Our results confirm long-standing theoretical predictions and bring into focus the rate prefactor as an essential element for understanding the mechanisms of folding.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: vmunoz3{at}ucmerced.edu.
Author contributions: V.M. designed research; M. Szczepaniak, M.C., and C.S.d.M. performed research; M.I.-B., J.C.M., and I.L. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; M. Szczepaniak, M.C., M. Sadqi, and V.M. analyzed data; and M. Szczepaniak and V.M. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1900203116/-/DCSupplemental.
Published under the PNAS license.
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- Biophysics and Computational Biology