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*


* Department of Biological Sciences and
Department of Physics, Columbia University, New York, New York 10027;
Department of Bioengineering, University of Illinois, Chicago, Illinois 60607;
Instituto Cajal, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, 28002 Madrid, Spain; and ¶ University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to J. M. Fernandez, Dept. of Biological Sciences, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027.E-mail: jfernandez{at}columbia.edu.
The introduction of disulfide bonds into proteins creates additional mechanical barriers and limits the unfolded contour length (i.e., the maximal extension) measured by single-molecule force spectroscopy. Here, we engineer single disulfide bonds into four different locations of the human cardiac titin module (I27) to control the contour length while keeping the distance to the transition state unchanged. This enables the study of several biologically important parameters. First, we are able to precisely determine the end-to-end length of the transition state before unfolding (53 Å), which is longer than the end-to-end length of the protein obtained from NMR spectroscopy (43 Å). Second, the measured contour length per amino acid from five different methods (4.0 ± 0.2 Å) is longer than the end-to-end length obtained from the crystal structure (3.6 Å). Our measurement of the contour length takes into account all the internal degrees of freedom of the polypeptide chain, whereas crystallography measures the end-to-end length within the "frozen" protein structure. Furthermore, the control of contour length and therefore the number of amino acids unraveled before reaching the disulfide bond (n) facilitates the test of the chain length dependence on the folding time (
F). We find that both a power law scaling
F
n
with
= 4.4, and an exponential scaling with n0.6 fit the data range, in support of different protein-folding scenarios.
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