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History, rare and multiple events of mechanical unfolding of repeat proteins

Authors :
Arin Marchesi
Felix Rico
Fidan Sumbul
BIO-AFM-LAB Bio Atomic Force Microscopy Laboratory (Bio-AFM-Lab)
Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)
Source :
Journal of Chemical Physics, Journal of Chemical Physics, American Institute of Physics, 2018, 148 (12), ⟨10.1063/1.5013259⟩, The Journal of Chemical Physics
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2018.

Abstract

Mechanical unfolding of proteins consisting of repeat domains is an excellent tool to obtain large statistics. Force spectroscopy experiments using atomic force microscopy on proteins presenting multiple domains have revealed that unfolding forces depend on the number of folded domains (history) and have reported intermediate states and rare events. However, the common use of unspecific attachment approaches to pull the protein of interest holds important limitations to study unfolding history and may lead to discarding rare and multiple probing events due to the presence of unspecific adhesion and uncertainty on the pulling site. Site-specific methods that have recently emerged minimize this uncertainty and would be excellent tools to probe unfolding history and rare events. However, detailed characterization of these approaches is required to identify their advantages and limitations. Here, we characterize a site-specific binding approach based on the ultrastable complex dockerin/cohesin III revealing its advantages and limitations to assess the unfolding history and to investigate rare and multiple events during the unfolding of repeated domains. We show that this approach is more robust, reproducible, and provides larger statistics than conventional unspecific methods. We show that the method is optimal to reveal the history of unfolding from the very first domain and to detect rare events, while being more limited to assess intermediate states. Finally, we quantify the forces required to unfold two molecules pulled in parallel, difficult when using unspecific approaches. The proposed method represents a step forward toward more reproducible measurements to probe protein unfolding history and opens the door to systematic probing of rare and multiple molecule unfolding mechanisms.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219606 and 10897690
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Chemical Physics, Journal of Chemical Physics, American Institute of Physics, 2018, 148 (12), ⟨10.1063/1.5013259⟩, The Journal of Chemical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....abe7a90454a53e25c776560c604d5e2e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5013259⟩