In
this work, we measured the millisecond residue specific protein folding
and unfolding dynamics in E. coli cells for two protein
GB3 mutants using NMR. The results show that the protein folding and
unfolding dynamics in cells is different from that in buffer. Through
a two-site exchange model, it is shown that both the population and
the exchange rate are changed by the E. coli cellular
environment. Further investigation suggests that the change is likely
due to the quinary interaction with crowded molecules in the cell.
Our work underlines the importance of cellular environment to protein
folding kinetics and thermodynamics although this environmental effect
may not be large enough to change the protein structure.
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