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Biophys J, February 2001, p. 939-951, Vol. 80, No. 2
-NMR

and
*Department of Chemistry, Washington University, St. Louis,
Missouri 63130-4899; and
Laboratory for Macromolecular
Analysis and Proteomics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx,
New York 10461 USA
Studies by one-dimensional NMR are reported on the
interconversion of folded and unfolded forms of the GCN4 leucine zipper in neutral saline buffer. The peptide bears 99%
13C
labels at three sites: V9, L12, and G31.
Time-domain 13C
-NMR spectra are interpreted
by global Bayesian lineshape analysis to extract the rate constants for
both unfolding and folding as functions of temperature in the range
47-71°C. The data are well fit by the assumption that the same rate
constants apply at each labeled site, confirming that only two
conformational states need be considered. Results show that 1) both
processes require a free energy of activation; 2) unfolding is
kinetically enthalpy-opposed and entropy-driven, while folding is the
opposite; and 3) the transition state dimer ensemble averages ~40%
helical. The activation parameters for unfolding, derived from NMR data
at the elevated temperatures where both conformations are populated,
lead to estimates of the rate constant at low temperatures (5-15°C)
that agree with extant values determined by stopped-flow CD via
dilution from denaturing media. However, the corresponding estimated
values for the folding rate constant are larger by two to three orders of magnitude than those obtained by stopped flow. We propose that this
apparent disagreement is caused by the necessity, in the stopped-flow
experiment, for initiation of new helices as the highly
denaturant-unfolded molecule adjusts to the newly created benign
solvent conditions. This must reduce the success rate of collisions in
producing the folded molecule. In the NMR determinations, however, the
unfolded chains always have a small, but essential, helix content that
makes such initiation unnecessary. Support for this hypothesis is
adduced from recent extant experiments on the helix-coil transition in
single-chain helical peptides and from demonstration that the folding
rate constants for coiled coils, as obtained by stopped flow, are
influenced by the nature of the denaturant used.
Biophys J, February 2001, p. 939-951, Vol. 80, No. 2
© 2001 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/01/02/939/13 $2.00
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