Comparative analysis of folding and unfolding dynamics and free-energy landscapes in homologous cold shock proteins with variable thermal stabilities

Author:

Xue Zhenyong12,Sun Hao12ORCID,Hong Haiyan1,Zhang Zhuwei12,Zhang Yuhang12ORCID,Guo Zilong2,Le Shimin1,Chen Hu12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Institute for Biomimetics and Soft Matter, Fujian Provincial Key Lab for Soft Functional Materials Research, Department of Physics, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, China

2. Center of Biomedical Physics, Wenzhou Institute, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wenzhou 325000, China

Abstract

Cold shock proteins from the mesophilic organism (BsCSP), the thermophilic organism (BcCSP), and the hyperthermophilic organism (TmCSP) are homologous proteins with similar native structure but quite different thermal stabilities, which makes them promising candidates for investigating the general and specific aspects the folding and unfolding dynamics of proteins and free-energy landscapes. In this study, we employed magnetic tweezers to explore the force-dependent folding and unfolding rates of BsCSP, BcCSP, and TmCSP at forces from several pN to tens of pN. Our results indicate similar force-dependent folding rates for these three proteins, while the unfolding rate of BsCSP, BcCSP, and TmCSP decreases sequentially, consistent with previous biochemical findings. Comparing with TmCSP, BcCSP shows lower but sufficient stability with folding free energy of 8.0 kBT, and its force-dependent unfolding rates exhibit tremendous nonlinear behavior deviated from Bell's model like TmCSP. BsCSP has very low stability with folding free energy of only 3.9 kBT, and its force-dependent unfolding rates at 3–10 pN exhibit almost linear behavior. Comprehensive free-energy landscapes are constructed, revealing common barriers that governs folding and unfolding dynamics for BcCSP and TmCSP but a wide merged barrier for BsCSP. Our findings provide valuable insights into the folding and unfolding mechanisms of these CSPs, shedding light on the relationship between protein structure, stability, and mechanical properties. Published by the American Physical Society 2024

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Wenzhou Institute

Publisher

American Physical Society (APS)

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