When a denatured polypeptide is put into refolding conditions, it undergoes conformational changes on a variety of times scales. We set out here to distinguish the fast events that promote productive folding from other processes that may be generic to any non-folding polypeptide. We have apply an ab initio folding algorithm to model the folding of various proteins and their compositionally identical, random-sequence analogues. In the earliest stages, proteins and their scrambled-sequence counterparts undergo indistinguishable reductions in the extent to which they explore conformation space. For both polypeptides, an early contraction occurs but does not involve the formation of a distinct intermediate. Following this phase, however, the naturally-occurring sequences are distinguished by an increase in the formation of three-body correlations wherein a hydrophobic group desolvates and protects an intra-molecular hydrogen bond. These correlations are manifested in a mild but measurable reduction of the accessible configuration space beyond that of the random-sequence peptides, and portend the folding to the native structure. Hence, early events reflect a generic response of the denatured ensemble to a change in solvent condition, but the wild-type sequence develops additional correlations as its structure evolves that can reveal the protein's foldability.
Copyright 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.