Cooperative protein folding requires distant regions of a protein to interact and provide mutual stabilization. The mechanism of this long-distance coupling remains poorly understood. Here, we use T4 lysozyme (T4L*) as a model to investigate long-range communications across a globular protein. T4L* is composed of two structurally distinct subdomains, although it behaves in a two-state manner at equilibrium. The subdomains of T4L* are connected via two topological connections: the N-terminal helix that is structurally part of the C-terminal subdomain (the A-helix) and a long helix that spans both subdomains (the C-helix). To understand the role that the C-helix plays in cooperative folding, we analyzed a circularly permuted version of T4L* (CP13*), whose subdomains are connected only by the C-helix. We demonstrate that when isolated as individual fragments, both subdomains of CP13* can fold autonomously into marginally stable conformations. The energetics of the N-terminal subdomain depend on the formation of a salt bridge known to be important for stability in the full-length protein. We show that the energetic contribution of the salt bridge to the stability of the N-terminal fragment increases when the C-helix is stabilized, such as occurs upon folding of the Cterminal subdomain. These results suggest a model where long-range energetic coupling is mediated by helix stabilization.Keywords: protein folding, effective concentration, cooperativity, helix stabilization, T4 lysozyme, In this work, we investigate how a helix spanning the two subdomains of T4 lysozyme* couples distant regions of the protein. We find evidence for a model of long-distance coupling that relies on the cooperative nature of helix formation to stabilize a long-range tertiary salt bridge interaction at one end of the helix and thereby couple the folding of T4 lysozyme's subdomains. This mechanistic model may have implications for co-translational folding.
IntroductionCooperativity is a hallmark of globular proteins. At equilibrium, many small (<200 residues) globular proteins fold in an apparent two-state manner (UāN), populating either a completely folded or unfolded conformation 1,2 . The stability of the folded protein (ĪG UN = G N -G U ) is the sum of many interactions, both local and long-range. While the chemical nature and mechanism of the short-range, local interactions can be easy to identify and investigate, it is difficult to probe the long-range interactions that cause the structure and energetics in one region to be coupled to those in another region and thus lead to two-state behavior. For repeat proteins, such as ankrin domains, this coupling has been attributed to a large interfacial energy that, in some cases, overshadows the lack of intrinsic stability of the individual repeats 3,4 .Here, we explore coupling between distant regions of a protein using the protein T4 lysozyme*, T4L* (* denotes the cysteine-free pseudo-wild type variant 5 ). T4L* is a well-studied globular protein; the stabilities and structures of hundreds of...