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The FASEB Journal, Vol 9, 1013-1022, Copyright © 1995 by The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology


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Protein Motifs. 7. The four-helix bundle: what determines a fold?

S Kamtekar and MH Hecht
Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, New Jersey 08544-1009, USA.

The four-helix bundle motif occurs in many structural contexts and in proteins that are functionally diverse. The motif can be classified into individual folds on the basis of topological and geometric properties. It has been thoroughly investigated structurally by both nuclear magnetic resonance and x-ray crystallography. Many mutants of four-helix bundles have been generated, and the motif has also been the target of de novo design studies. Taken together, these studies provide an opportunity to examine many of the forces governing protein folding. In this article we consider the relative importance of the burial of hydrophobic residues, loss of conformational entropy, packing interactions, interhelical turn composition, and helical dipole interactions all within the context of a single folding motif. We conclude by examining why de novo designed four-helix bundle proteins possess flexible interiors, and possible mechanisms by which natural proteins may lock their cores into rigid structures.


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