Title
Single-Molecule Studies of Protein Folding with Optical Tweezers
Date Issued
20 June 2020
Access level
open access
Resource Type
review article
Author(s)
Bustamante C.
Alexander L.
MacIuba K.
Kaiser C.M.
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Department of Physics, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Kavli Energy NanoScience Institute, University of California, Berkeley, 94720, CA, United States
Publisher(s)
Annual Reviews Inc.
Abstract
Manipulation of individual molecules with optical tweezers provides a powerful means of interrogating the structure and folding of proteins. Mechanical force is not only a relevant quantity in cellular protein folding and function, but also a convenient parameter for biophysical folding studies. Optical tweezers offer precise control in the force range relevant for protein folding and unfolding, from which single-molecule kinetic and thermodynamic information about these processes can be extracted. In this review, we describe both physical principles and practical aspects of optical tweezers measurements and discuss recent advances in the use of this technique for the study of protein folding. In particular, we describe the characterization of folding energy landscapes at high resolution, studies of structurally complex multidomain proteins, folding in the presence of chaperones, and the ability to investigate real-time cotranslational folding of a polypeptide.
Start page
443
End page
470
Volume
89
Language
English
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85086886113
PubMed ID
Source
Annual Review of Biochemistry
ISSN of the container
00664154
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus