An "Onion-like" Model of Protein Unfolding: Collective versus Site Specific Approaches.
Anastasia S PolitouAnnalisa PastorePiero Andrea TemussiPublished in: Chemphyschem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry (2021)
Approximating protein unfolding by an all-or-none cooperative event is a convenient assumption that can provide precious global information on protein stability. It is however quickly emerging that the scenario is far more complex and that global denaturation curves often hide a rich heterogeneity of states that are largely probe dependent. In this review, we revisit the importance of gaining site-specific information on the unfolding process. We focus on nuclear magnetic resonance, as this is the main technique able to provide site-specific information. We review historical and most modern approaches that have allowed an appreciable advancement of the field of protein folding. We also demonstrate how unfolding is a reporter dependent event, suggesting the outmost importance of selecting the reporter carefully.