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Abstract
Natural proteins are characterised by a complex folding pathway defined uniquely for each fold. Designed coiled-coil protein origami (CCPO) cages are distinct from natural compact proteins, since their fold is prescribed by discrete long-range interactions between orthogonal pairwise-interacting coiled-coil (CC) modules within a single polypeptide chain. Here, we demonstrate that CCPO proteins fold in a stepwise sequential pathway. Molecular dynamics simulations and stopped-flow Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) measurements reveal that CCPO folding is dominated by the effective intra-chain distance between CC modules in the primary sequence and subsequent folding intermediates, allowing identical CC modules to be employed for multiple cage edges and thus relaxing CCPO cage design requirements. The number of orthogonal modules required for constructing a CCPO tetrahedron can be reduced from six to as little as three different CC modules. The stepwise modular nature of the folding pathway offers insights into the folding of tandem repeat proteins and can be exploited for the design of modular protein structures based on a given set of orthogonal modules.
Coiled-coil protein origami (CCPO) is a strategy for the design of polyhedral cage-shaped protein folds based on coiled-coil (CC) dimer-forming peptides. Here, the authors show that CCPO proteins fold in a multistep process governed by the spatial distance between CC modules in the primary sequence and subsequent folding intermediates, which enables the use of identical CC modules for the CCPO tetrahedron design.
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1 National Institute of Chemistry, Department of Synthetic Biology and Immunology, Ljubljana, Slovenia (GRID:grid.454324.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 0661 0844)
2 National Institute of Chemistry, Department of Synthetic Biology and Immunology, Ljubljana, Slovenia (GRID:grid.454324.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 0661 0844); University of Ljubljana, Interdisciplinary Doctoral Programme in Biomedicine, Ljubljana, Slovenia (GRID:grid.8954.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 0721 6013)
3 National Institute of Chemistry, Department of Synthetic Biology and Immunology, Ljubljana, Slovenia (GRID:grid.454324.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 0661 0844); EN-FIST Centre of Excellence, Ljubljana, Slovenia (GRID:grid.457261.3)
4 National Institute of Chemistry, Department of Polymer Chemistry and Technology, Ljubljana, Slovenia (GRID:grid.454324.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 0661 0844)
5 University of Primorska, FAMNIT, Koper, Slovenia (GRID:grid.412740.4) (ISNI:0000 0001 0688 0879); Physics and Mechanics, Institute of Mathematics, Ljubljana, Slovenia (GRID:grid.457169.8) (ISNI:0000 0001 1256 002X)