Membrane proteins are designed to fold and function in a lipid membrane, yet folding experiments within a native membrane environment are challenging to design. Here we show that single-molecule forced unfolding experiments can be adapted to study helical membrane protein folding under native-like bicelle conditions. Applying force using magnetic tweezers, we find that a transmembrane helix protein, Escherichia coli rhomboid protease GlpG, unfolds in a highly cooperative manner, largely unraveling as one physical unit in response to mechanical tension above 25 pN. Considerable hysteresis is observed, with refolding occurring only at forces below 5 pN. Characterizing the energy landscape reveals only modest thermodynamic stability (G = 6.5 k...
Membrane proteins are assembled through balanced interactions among proteins, lipids and water. Stud...
Multiple molecular dynamics simulations of bacterioopsin pulling from its C-terminus show that its a...
Knots are remarkable topological features in nature. The presence of knots in crystallographic struc...
To understand membrane protein biogenesis, we need to explore folding within a bilayer context. Here...
Membrane proteins are a neglected, but important class of proteins throughout the biological world. ...
AbstractThe folding and stability of transmembrane proteins is a fundamental and unsolved biological...
Membrane proteins carry great importance in cellular functions, such as nutrient uptake, transport o...
Relatively little is known about the folding and stability of membrane proteins. Conventional therma...
Protein folding occurs as a set of transitions between structural states within an energy landscape....
SummaryIn response to mechanical stress, membrane proteins progress through sequences of major unfol...
Single-molecule force spectroscopy methods, such as AFM and magnetic tweezers, have proved extremely...
AbstractMechanical single-molecule techniques offer exciting possibilities to investigate protein fo...
Understanding the molecular mechanism of protein folding has always remained a challenging problem. ...
We applied dynamic single-molecule force spectroscopy to quantify the parameters (free energy of act...
The three-dimensional structures of proteins often show a modular architecture comprised of discrete...
Membrane proteins are assembled through balanced interactions among proteins, lipids and water. Stud...
Multiple molecular dynamics simulations of bacterioopsin pulling from its C-terminus show that its a...
Knots are remarkable topological features in nature. The presence of knots in crystallographic struc...
To understand membrane protein biogenesis, we need to explore folding within a bilayer context. Here...
Membrane proteins are a neglected, but important class of proteins throughout the biological world. ...
AbstractThe folding and stability of transmembrane proteins is a fundamental and unsolved biological...
Membrane proteins carry great importance in cellular functions, such as nutrient uptake, transport o...
Relatively little is known about the folding and stability of membrane proteins. Conventional therma...
Protein folding occurs as a set of transitions between structural states within an energy landscape....
SummaryIn response to mechanical stress, membrane proteins progress through sequences of major unfol...
Single-molecule force spectroscopy methods, such as AFM and magnetic tweezers, have proved extremely...
AbstractMechanical single-molecule techniques offer exciting possibilities to investigate protein fo...
Understanding the molecular mechanism of protein folding has always remained a challenging problem. ...
We applied dynamic single-molecule force spectroscopy to quantify the parameters (free energy of act...
The three-dimensional structures of proteins often show a modular architecture comprised of discrete...
Membrane proteins are assembled through balanced interactions among proteins, lipids and water. Stud...
Multiple molecular dynamics simulations of bacterioopsin pulling from its C-terminus show that its a...
Knots are remarkable topological features in nature. The presence of knots in crystallographic struc...