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민두영

Min, Duyoung
Single-molecule Biophysics and Biochemistry Lab
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Unfolding of a CIC chloride transporter retains memory of its evolutionary history

Author(s)
Min, DuyoungJefferson, Robert E.Qi, YifeiWang, Jing YangArbing, Mark A.Im, WonpilBowie, James U.
Issued Date
2018-05
DOI
10.1038/s41589-018-0025-4
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/27802
Fulltext
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41589-018-0025-4
Citation
NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY, v.14, no.5, pp.489 - 496
Abstract
CIC chloride channels and transporters are important for chloride homeostasis in species from bacteria to human. Mutations in CIC proteins cause genetically inherited diseases, some of which are likely to involve folding defects. The CIC proteins present a challenging and unusual biological folding problem because they are large membrane proteins possessing a complex architecture, with many reentrant helices that go only partway through membrane and loop back out. Here we were able to examine the unfolding of the Escherichia coli CIC transporter, CIC-ec1, using single-molecule forced unfolding methods. We found that the protein could be separated into two stable halves that unfolded independently. The independence of the two domains is consistent with an evolutionary model in which the two halves arose from independently folding subunits that later fused together. Maintaining smaller folding domains of lesser complexity within large membrane proteins may be an advantageous strategy to avoid misfolding traps.
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
ISSN
1552-4450
Keyword
SINGLE-MOLECULE FORCENATIVE MEMBRANE-PROTEINSMAGNETIC TWEEZERSCLC CHANNELSSTABILITYSPECTROSCOPYSELECTIVITYSIMULATIONDISEASERANGE

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