Publication Date:
2010
abstract:
The escape process from the native valley for proteins subjected to a constant stretching force is examined
using a model for a barrel. For a wide range of forces, the unfolding dynamics can be treated as onedimensional
diffusion, parametrized in terms of the end-to-end distance. In particular, the escape times can be
evaluated as first passage times for a Brownian particle moving on the protein free-energy landscape, using the
Smoluchowski equation. At strong forces, the unfolding process can be viewed as a diffusive drift away from
the native state, while at weak forces thermal activation is the relevant mechanism. An escape-time analysis
within this approach reveals a crossover from an exponential to an inverse Gaussian escape-time distribution
upon passing from weak to strong forces. Moreover, a single expression valid at weak and strong forces can be
devised both for the average unfolding time as well as for the corresponding variance. The analysis offers a
possible explanation of recent experimental findings for the proteins ddFLN4 and ubiquitin.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
protein folding; free energy landscape; unfolding times
List of contributors:
Luccioli, Stefano; Torcini, Alessandro
Published in: