Native-state fingerprint on the ubiquitin translocation across a nanopore

2020 
: We study the translocation of the ubiquitin molecule (Ubq) across a channel with a double section which constitutes a general feature of several transmembrane nanopores such as the α-hemolysin (αHL). Our purpose is to establish the structure-dependent character of the Ubq translocation pathway. This implies to find the correspondence, if any, between the translocational unfolding steps and the Ubq native state. For this reason, it is convenient to apply a coarse-grained computational approach, where the protein is described only by the backbone and the force field only exploits the information contained in the native state (in the spirit of Gō-like models, or native-centric models). The αHL-like pore is portrayed as two coaxial confining cylinders: a larger one for the vestibule and a narrower one for the barrel (or stem). Such simplified approach allows a large number of translocation events to be collected by limited computational resources. The co-translocational unfolding of Ubq is described via a few collective variables that characterize the translocation progress. We find two translocation intermediates (stalled conformations) that can be associated with specific unfolding stages. In particular, in the earliest step, the strand S5 unfolds and enters the pore. This step splits the native conformation into two structural clusters packing against each other in the Ubq fold. A second stall occurs when the hairpin of the N terminal engages the stem region.
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