Andrew P Capaldi

Andrew P Capaldi

Associate Professor, Molecular and Cellular Biology
Associate Professor, Genetics - GIDP
Associate Professor, BIO5 Institute
Member of the General Faculty
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Primary Department
Contact
(520) 626-9376

Research Interest

Andrew Capaldi, PhD, researches the signaling pathways and transcription factors in a cell that are organized into circuits. They allow cells to process information and make decisions. For Dr. Capaldi, the work arises in understanding both how these circuits are built from their components, and how they function and malfunction. To address these questions, he is working to reverse engineer the circuitry that controls cell growth in budding yeast using a combination of genomic, proteomic and computational methods. http://capaldilab.mcb.arizona.edu

Publications

Capaldi, A. P., & Radford, S. E. (2001). An unfolding story. Trends in Biochemical Sciences, 26(12), 753-.
Capaldi, A. P., Kleanthous, C., & Radford, S. E. (2002). Im7 folding mechanism: Misfolding on a path to the native state. Nature Structural Biology, 9(3), 209-216.

PMID: 11875516;Abstract:

Many proteins populate collapsed intermediate states during folding. In order to elucidate the nature and importance of these species, we have mapped the structure of the on-pathway intermediate of the four-helix protein, Im7, together with the conformational changes it undergoes as it folds to the native state. Kinetic data for 29 Im7 point mutants show that the intermediate contains three of the four helices found in the native structure, packed around a specific hydrophobic core. However, the intermediate contains many non-native interactions; as a result, hydrophobic interactions become disrupted in the rate-limiting transition state before the final helix docks onto the developing structure. The results of this study support a hierarchical mechanism of protein folding and explain why the misfolding of Im7 occurs. The data also demonstrate that non-native interactions can play a significant role in folding, even for small proteins with simple topologies.