| Home > Publications database > Novel Knotted Solenoid fold with order-shifted coil arrangement leads to nontrivial 3 1 topology |
| Journal Article | PUBDB-2026-01397 |
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2026
National Acad. of Sciences
Washington, DC
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Please use a persistent id in citations: doi:10.1073/pnas.2525920123 doi:10.3204/PUBDB-2026-01397
Abstract: Herein, we present crystal structures of proteins adopting a fold not identified among known -solenoids in current structural databases, a Knotted Solenoid. These proteins exhibit a characteristic solenoidal architecture, closely resembling -solenoid proteins. However, a unique “skip-and-backtrack” shift is observed: One coil skips a rotation while the next realigns, distinguishing this fold from previously described solenoids and allowing the formation of a 31 (trefoil) knot. Moreover, the proteins form homodimers, and conservation of interface residues suggests a shared oligomerization state across all Knotted Solenoids. This fold is exclusive to a specific group of bacteria and remains structurally conserved despite high sequence variability (pairwise identities down to 6%). Conserved residues are observed at the beginning of each coil and within the knot core, suggesting functional or structural significance, and an independent evolutionary path to unknotted solenoids. In vitro chemical and thermal stability studies showed fully reversible unfolding in urea, and no additional transitions even in high concentrations of guanidinium chloride. The far-ultraviolet circular dichroism unfolding kinetics showed relatively rapid unfolding. Explicit-solvent molecular dynamics simulations and a generative deep learning model show that topological constraints stabilize “skip-and-backtrack” shift in the Knotted Solenoid. A monomeric unit can self-tie into the native 31 knotted state through a slipknot intermediate. It then interacts with another chain via its hydrophobic surface, promoting second chain folding and dimerization. The identification of novel knotted proteins within a previously considered unknotted fold provides an opportunity to investigate the evolutionary pressures and functional implications of knotting in shaping protein architecture.
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