The sequence of apamin, an 18 residue bee venom
toxin, encloses all the information required for the correct
disulfide-coupled folding into the cystine-stabilized α-helical
motif. Three apamin analogs, each containing a pair of
selenocysteine residues replacing the related cysteines,
were synthesized to mimic the three possible apamin isomers
with two crossed, parallel, or consecutive disulfides,
respectively. Refolding experiments clearly revealed that
the redox potential of selenocysteine prevails over the
sequence encoded structural information for proper folding
of apamin. Thus, selenocysteine can be used as a new device
to generate productive and nonproductive folding intermediates
of peptides and proteins. In fact, disulfides are selectively
reduced in presence of the diselenide and the conformational
features derived from these intermediates as well as from
the three-dimensional (3D) structures of the selenocysteine-containing
analogs with their nonnatural networks of diselenide/disulfide
bridges allowed to gain further insight into the subtle
driving forces for the correct folding of apamin that mainly
derive from local conformational preferences.