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1.
The effect of guanidine hydrochloride concentration on the kinetics of the conformational change of Escherichia coli thioredoxin was examined by using fluorescence, absorbance, circular dichroic, and viscosity measurements. Native thioredoxin unfolds in a single kinetic phase whose time constant decreases markedly with increasing denaturant concentration in the denaturation base-line zone. This dependency merges with the time constant of the slowest refolding kinetic phase at the midpoint of the equilibrium transition in 2.5 M denaturant. The time constant of the slowest refolding phase becomes denaturant independent below 1 M denaturant in the native base-line region. The denaturant-independent slowest refolding phase has an activation energy of 16 kcal/mol and is generated in the denatured base-line zone in a denaturant-independent reaction having a time constant of 19 s at 25 degrees C. The fractional amplitude of the slowest refolding phase diminishes in the native base-line zone to a minimum value of 0.25. This decrease is accompanied by an increase in the fractional amplitudes of two faster refolding kinetic phases, an increase describing a sigmoidal transition centered at about 1.6 M denaturant. Manual multimixing measurements indicate that only the slowest refolding kinetic phase generates a product having the stability of the native protein. We suggest that the two faster refolding phases reflect the transient accumulation of folding intermediates which can contain a nonnative isomer of proline peptide 76.  相似文献   

2.
The unfolding and refolding of pancreatic ribonuclease have been observed by absorbance, fluorescence, and size exclusion chromatographic measurements in solutions of guanidinium chloride continuously maintained at pH 6.0 and 4 degrees C. The spectral measurements were fitted with a minimal number of kinetic phases while the chromatographic measurements were simulated from an explicit mechanism. All of the measurements are consistent with a minimal mechanism involving seven components. The folded components include the native protein and two transiently stable intermediates each having the same hydrodynamic volume. The intermediate having all native peptide isomers has an unfolding midpoint in 3.8 M denaturant while the intermediate having one nonnative peptide isomer has an unfolding midpoint in 1.3 M denaturant. The unfolded protein is distributed among four components having the same hydrodynamic volume but differing peptide isomers. At equilibrium, 10% of the denatured protein has all native isomers, 60% has one nonnative isomer, 5% has a different nonnative isomer, and 25% has both nonnative isomers. In low denaturant concentrations, the dominant component with one nonnative isomer can refold to transiently populate the compact intermediate with the same nonnative isomer.  相似文献   

3.
The unfolding and refolding of creatine kinase (ATP:creatine N-phosphotransferase (CK), EC 2.7.3.2) during denaturation and reactivation by trifluoroethanol (TFE) have been studied. Significant aggregation was observed when CK was denatured at TFE concentrations between 10% and 40% (v/v). 50% TFE (v/v) was used to study the denaturation and unfolding of CK. The activity loss of CK was a very quick process, as was the marked conformational changes during denaturation followed by fluorescence emission spectra and far-ultraviolet CD spectra. DTNB modification and size exclusion chromatography were used to find that CK dissociated and was in its monomer state after denaturation with 50% TFE. Reactivation and refolding were observed after 80-fold dilution of the denatured CK into 0.05 M Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8.0. The denatured CK recovered about 38% activity following a two phase course (k(1)=4.82+/-0.41x10(-3) s(-1), k(2)=0.60+/-0.01x10(-3) s(-1)). Intrinsic fluorescence maximum intensity changes showed that the refolding process also followed biphasic kinetics (k(1)=4.34+/-0.27x10(-3) s(-1), k(2)=0.76+/-0.02x10(-3) s(-1)) after dilution into the proper solutions. The far-ultraviolet CD spectra ellipticity changes at 222 nm during the refolding process also showed a two phase course (k(1)=4.50+/-0.07x10(-3) s(-1), k(2)=1.13+/-0.05x10(-3) s(-1)). Our results suggest that TFE can be used as a reversible denaturant like urea and GuHCl. The 50% TFE induced CK denaturation state, which was referred to as the 'TFE state', and the partially refolded CK are compared with the molten globule state. The aggregation caused by TFE during denaturation is also discussed in this paper.  相似文献   

4.
The kinetics of the hydrodynamic volume change accompanying the reversible unfolding of staphylococcal nuclease have been observed by size-exclusion chromatography at 4 degrees C and pH 7.0 using the denaturant guanidine hydrochloride. The observed chromatographic profiles have been simulated by a six-component unfolding/refolding mechanism using a consistent set of equilibrium and kinetic parameters. The native protein is an equilibrium mixture of the cis and trans isomers of the peptide bond preceding proline-117. The native conformation containing the cis isomer dominates the equilibrium mixture, is more stable, and unfolds more slowly at its transition midpoint. The denatured protein is an equilibrium mixture of at least four components, the cis/trans isomers of proline-117 and one of the five remaining prolines. The dominant refolding pathway is initiated from the denatured component containing the trans isomer of proline-117. The six-component mechanism is consistent with tryptophan fluorescence kinetic measurements of the wild-type protein and with chromatographic measurements of a mutant P117G protein.  相似文献   

5.
Enoki S  Saeki K  Maki K  Kuwajima K 《Biochemistry》2004,43(44):14238-14248
Green fluorescent protein from the jellyfish Aequorea victoria can serve as a good model protein to understand protein folding in a complex environment with molecular chaperones and other macromolecules such as those in biological cells, but little is known about the detailed mechanisms of the in vitro folding of green fluorescent protein itself. We therefore investigated the kinetic refolding of a mutant (F99S/M153T/V163A) of green fluorescent protein, which is known to mature more efficiently than the wild-type protein, from the acid-denatured state; refolding was observed by chromophore fluorescence, tryptophan fluorescence, and far-UV CD, using a stopped-flow technique. In this study, we demonstrated that the kinetics of the refolding of the mutant have at least five kinetic phases and involve nonspecific collapse within the dead time of a stopped-flow apparatus and the subsequent formation of an on-pathway intermediate with the characteristics of the molten globule state. We also demonstrated that the slowest phase and a major portion of the second slowest phase were rate-limited by slow prolyl isomerization in the intermediate state, and this rate limitation accounts for a major portion of the observed kinetics in the folding of green fluorescent protein.  相似文献   

6.
The unfolding and refolding of the extremely heat-stable pullulanase from Pyrococcus woesei has been investigated using guanidinium chloride as denaturant. The monomeric enzyme (90 kDa) was found to be very resistant to chemical denaturation and the transition midpoint for guanidinium chloride-induced unfolding was determined to be 4.86 +/- 0.29 M for intrinsic fluorescence and 4.90 +/- 0.31 M for far-UV CD changes. The unfolding process was reversible. Reactivation of the completely denatured enzyme (in 7.8 M guanidinium chloride) was obtained upon removal of the denaturant by stepwise dilution; 100% reactivation was observed when refolding was carried out via a guanidinium chloride concentration of 4 M in the first dilution step. Particular attention has been paid to the role of Ca2+ which activates and stabilizes this archaeal pullulanase against thermal inactivation. The enzyme binds two Ca2+ ions with a Kd of 0.080 +/- 0.010 microM and a Hill coefficient H of 1.00 +/- 0.10. This cation enhances significantly the stability of the pullulanase against guanidinium chloride-induced unfolding and the DeltaGH2OD increased from 6.83 +/- 0.43 to 8.42 +/- 0.55 kcal.mol-1. The refolding of the pullulanase, on the other hand, was not affected by Ca2+.  相似文献   

7.
Cofactor and tryptophan accessibility of the 65-kDa form of rat brain glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) was investigated by fluorescence quenching measurements using acrylamide, I-, and Cs+ as the quenchers. Trp residues were partially exposed to solvent. I- was less able and Cs+ was more able to quench the fluorescence of Trp residues in the holoenzyme of GAD (holoGAD) than the apoenzyme (apoGAD). The fraction of exposed Trp residues were in the range of 30-49%. In contrast, pyridoxal-P bound to the active site of GAD was exposed to solvent. I- was more able and Cs+ was less able to quench the fluorescence of pyridoxal-P in holoGAD. The cofactor was present in a positively charged microenvironment, making it accessible for interactions with anions. A difference in the exposure of Trp residues and pyridoxal-P to these charged quenchers suggested that the exposed Trp residues were essentially located outside of the active site. Changes in the accessibility of Trp residues upon pyridoxal-P binding strongly supported a significant conformational change in GAD. Fluorescence intensity measurements were also carried out to investigate the unfolding of GAD using guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) as the denaturant. At 0.8-1.5 M GdnHCl, an intermediate step was observed during the unfolding of GAD from the native to the denatured state, and was not found during the refolding of GAD from the denatured to native state, indicating that this intermediate step was not a reversible process. However, at >1.5 M GdnHCl for holoGAD and >2.0 M GdnHCl for apoGAD, the transition leading to the denatured state was reversible. It was suggested that the intermediate step involved the dissociation of native dimer of GAD into monomers and the change in the secondary structure of the protein. Circular dichroism revealed a decrease in the alpha-helix content of GAD from 36 to 28%. The unfolding pattern suggested that GAD may consist of at least two unfolding domains. Unfolding of the lower GdnHCl-resisting domain occurred at a similar concentration of denaturant for apoGAD and holoGAD, while unfolding of the higher GdnHCl-resisting domain occurred at a higher concentration of GdnHCl for apoGAD than holoGAD.  相似文献   

8.
Folding and stability of trp aporepressor from Escherichia coli   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Equilibrium and kinetic studies of the urea-induced unfolding of trp aporepressor from Escherichia coli were performed to probe the folding mechanism of this intertwined, dimeric protein. The equilibrium unfolding transitions at pH 7.6 and 25 degrees C monitored by difference absorbance, fluorescence, and circular dichroism spectroscopy are coincident within experimental error. All three transitions are well described by a two-state model involving the native dimer and the unfolded monomer; the free energy of folding in the absence of denaturant and under standard-state conditions is estimated to be 23.3 +/- 0.9 kcal/mol of dimer. The midpoint of the equilibrium unfolding transition increases with increasing protein concentration in the manner expected from the law of mass action for the two-state model. We find no evidence for stable folding intermediates. Kinetic studies reveal that unfolding is governed by a single first-order reaction whose relaxation time decreases exponentially with increasing urea concentration and also decreases with increasing protein concentration in the transition zone. Refolding involves at least three phases that depend on both the protein concentration and the final urea concentration in a complex manner. The relaxation time of the slowest of these refolding phases is identical with that for the single phase in unfolding in the transition zone, consistent with the results expected for a reaction that is kinetically reversible. The two faster refolding phases are presumed to arise from slow isomerization reactions in the unfolded form and reflect parallel folding channels.  相似文献   

9.
Nakao M  Maki K  Arai M  Koshiba T  Nitta K  Kuwajima K 《Biochemistry》2005,44(17):6685-6692
The intermediate in the equilibrium unfolding of canine milk lysozyme induced by a denaturant is known to be very stable with characteristics of the molten globule state. Furthermore, there are at least two kinetic intermediates during refolding of this protein: a burst-phase (first) intermediate formed within the dead time of stopped-flow measurements and a second intermediate that accumulates with a rate constant of 22 s(-)(1). To clarify the relationships of these intermediates with the equilibrium intermediate, and also to characterize the structural changes of the protein during refolding, here we studied the kinetic refolding reactions using stopped-flow circular dichroism at 10 different wavelengths and obtained the circular dichroism spectra of the intermediates. Comparison of the circular dichroism spectra of the intermediates, as well as the absence of observed kinetics in the refolding from the fully unfolded state to the equilibrium intermediate, has demonstrated that the burst-phase intermediate is equivalent to the equilibrium intermediate. The difference circular dichroism spectrum that represented changes from the kinetic intermediate to the native state had characteristics of an exciton coupling band, indicating that specific packing of tryptophan residues in this protein occurred in this phase. From these findings, we propose a schematic model of the refolding of canine milk lysozyme that is consistent with the hierarchical mechanism of protein folding.  相似文献   

10.
The heme iron of horse heart cytochrome c was selectively removed using anhydrous HF. The product, porphyrin c, exhibits the viscosity, far ultraviolet circular dichroic, and fluorescence properties characteristic for native cytochrome c. However, porphyrin c is more susceptible to denaturation by guanidine hydrochloride and by heat than is the parent cytochrome. All of the conformational parameters of porphyrin c exhibit a common reversible transition centered at 0.95 m guanidine hydrochloride at 23 degrees C and pH 7.0. Guanidine denatured porphyrin c refolds in two kinetic phases having time constants of 20 and 200 ms as detected by stopped flow absorbance or fluorescence measurement, with about 80% of the observed change in the faster phase. The kinetics of porphyrin c refolding are not significantly altered by increasing the viscosity of the refolding solvent 15-fold by addition of sucrose. We suggest that the folding of guanidine denatured cytochrome c is not a diffusion-limited process and that the requirement for protein axial ligation elicits the slow (s) kinetic phase observed in the refolding of cytochrome c.  相似文献   

11.
J A Zitzewitz  C R Matthews 《Biochemistry》1999,38(31):10205-10214
The alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase (alphaTS) from Escherichia coli is a 268-residue 8-stranded beta/alpha barrel protein. Two autonomous folding units, comprising the first six strands (residues 1-188) and the last two strands (residues 189-268), have been previously identified in this single structural domain protein by tryptic digestion [Higgins, W., Fairwell, T., and Miles, E. W. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 4827-4835]. The larger, amino-terminal fragment, alphaTS(1-188), was overexpressed and independently purified, and its equilibrium and kinetic folding properties were studied by absorbance, fluorescence, and near- and far-UV circular dichroism spectroscopies. The native state of the fragment unfolds cooperatively in an apparent two-state transition with a stability of 3.98 +/- 0.19 kcal mol(-1) in the absence of denaturant and a corresponding m value of 1.07 +/- 0.05 kcal mol(-1) M(-1). Similar to the full-length protein, the unfolding of the fragment shows two kinetic phases which arise from the presence of two discrete native state populations. Additionally, the fragment exhibits a significant burst phase in unfolding, indicating that a fraction of the folded state ensemble under native conditions has properties similar to those of the equilibrium intermediate populated at 3 M urea in full-length alphaTS. Refolding of alphaTS(1-188) is also complex, exhibiting two detectable kinetic phases and a burst phase that is complete within 5 ms. The two slowest isomerization phases observed in the refolding of the full-length protein are absent in the fragment, suggesting that these phases reflect contributions from the carboxy-terminal segment. The folding mechanism of alphaTS(1-188) appears to be a simplified version of the mechanism for the full-length protein [Bilsel, O., Zitzewitz, J. A., Bowers, K.E, and Matthews, C. R.(1999) Biochemistry 38, 1018-1029]. Four parallel channels in the full-length protein are reduced to a pair of channels that most likely reflect a cis/trans proline isomerization reaction in the amino-terminal fragment. The off- and on-pathway intermediates that exist for both full-length alphaTS and alphaTS(1-188) may reflect the preponderance of local interactions in the beta/alpha barrel motif.  相似文献   

12.
An analysis of the unfolding and refolding curves at equilibrium of dimeric bovine odorant binding protein (bOBP) has been performed. Unfolding induced by guanidinium chloride (GdnHCl) is completely reversible as far as structure and ligand binding capacity are concerned. The transition curves, as obtained by fluorescence and ellipticity measurements, are very similar and have the same protein concentration-independent midpoint (C1/2 approximately 2.6 M). This result implies a sequential, rather than a concerted, unfolding mechanism, with the involvement of an intermediate. However, since it has not been detected, this intermediate must be present in small amounts or have the same optical properties of either native or denatured protein. The thermodynamic best fit parameters, obtained according to a simple two-state model, are: deltaG degrees un,w = 5.0 +/- 0.6 kcal mol(-1), m = 1.9 +/- 0.2 kcal mol(-1) M(-1) and C1/2 = 2.6 +/- 0.1 M. The presence of the ligand dihydromyrcenol has a stabilising effect against unfolding by GdnHCl, with an extrapolated deltaG degrees un,w of 22.2 +/- 0.9 kcal mol(-1), a cooperative index of 3.2 +/- 0.3 and a midpoint of 4.6 +/- 0.4 M. The refolding curves, recorded after 24 h from dilution of denaturant are not yet at equilibrium: they show an apparently lower midpoint (C1/2 = 2.2 M), but tend to overlap the unfolding curve after several days. In contrast to chromatographic unfolding data, which fail to reveal the presence of folded intermediates, chromatographic refolding data as a function of time clearly show a rapid formation of folded monomers, followed by a slower step leading to folded dimers. Therefore, according to this result, we believe that the preferential unfolding/refolding mechanism is one in which dimer dissociation occurs before unfolding rather than the reverse.  相似文献   

13.
Scalley ML  Nauli S  Gladwin ST  Baker D 《Biochemistry》1999,38(48):15927-15935
We use a broad array of biophysical methods to probe the extent of structure and time scale of structural transitions in the protein L denatured state ensemble. Measurement of amide proton exchange protection during the first several milliseconds following initiation of refolding in 0.4 M sodium sulfate revealed weak protection in the first beta-hairpin and helix. A tryptophan residue was introduced into the first beta-hairpin to probe the extent of structure formation in this part of the protein; the intrinsic fluorescence of this tryptophan was found to deviate from that expected given its local sequence context in 2-3 M guanidine, suggesting some partial ordering of this region in the unfolded state ensemble. To further probe this partial ordering, dansyl groups were introduced via cysteine residues at three sites in the protein. It was found that fluorescence energy transfer from the introduced tryptophan to the dansyl groups decreased dramatically upon unfolding. Stopped-flow fluorescence studies showed that the recovery of dansyl fluorescence upon refolding occurred on a submillisecond time scale. To probe the interactions responsible for the residual structure observed in the denatured state ensemble, the conformation of a peptide corresponding to the first beta-hairpin and helix of protein L was studied using circular dichroism spectroscopy and compared to that of full-length protein L and previously characterized peptides corresponding to the isolated helix and second beta-hairpin.  相似文献   

14.
The protein λ6-85 has been implicated in barrierless folding by observations of kinetic relaxation after nanosecond T-jump. In this work we observed folding of this protein after dilution of a high denaturant in an ultrarapid microfluidic mixer at temperatures far below the thermal midpoint. The observations of total intensity and spectral shift of tryptophan fluorescence yielded distinctly different kinetics and activation energies. These results may be explained as diffusion on a low-barrier, one-dimensional, free-energy surface, with different probes having different sensitivities along the reaction coordinate. Additionally, we observed an extremely fast phase within the mixing time that was not observed by T-jump, suggesting that the ensemble of unfolded states populated at high denaturant is distinct from those accessible at high temperature.  相似文献   

15.
Xu X  Liu Q  Xie Y 《Biochemistry》2002,41(11):3546-3554
Anticoagulation factor II (ACF II) isolated from the venom of Agkistrodon acutus is an activated coagulation factor X-binding protein in a Ca(2+)-dependent fashion with marked anticoagulant activity. The equilibrium unfolding/refolding of apo-ACF II, holo-ACF II, and Tb(3+)-reconstituted ACF II in guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) solutions was studied by following the fluorescence and circular dichroism (CD). Metal ions were found to increase the structural stability of ACF II against GdnHCl and irreversible thermal denaturation and, furthermore, influence its unfolding/refolding behavior. The GdnHCl-induced unfolding/refolding of both apo-ACF II and Tb(3+)-ACF II is a two-state process with no detectable intermediate state, while the GdnHCl-induced unfolding/refolding of holo-ACF II in the presence of 1 mM Ca(2+) follows a three-state transition with an intermediate state. Ca(2+) ions play an important role in the stabilization of both native and I states of holo-ACF II. The decalcification of holo-ACF II shifts the ending zone of unfolding/refolding curve toward lower GdnHCl concentration, while the reconstitution of apo-ACF II with Tb(3+) ions shifts the initial zone of the denaturation curve toward higher GdnHCl concentration. Therefore, it is possible to find a denaturant concentration (2.1 M GdnHCl) at which refolding from the fully denatured state of apo-ACF II to the I state of holo-ACF II or to the native state of Tb(3+)-ACF II can be initiated merely by adding the 1 mM Ca(2+) ions or 10 microM Tb(3+) ions to the unfolded state of apo-ACF II, respectively, without changing the concentration of the denaturant. Using Tb(3+) as a fluorescence probe of Ca(2+), the kinetic results of metal ion-induced refolding provide evidence for the fact that the first phase of Tb(3+)-induced refolding should involve the formation of the compact metal-binding site regions, and subsequently, the protein undergoes further conformational rearrangements to form the native structure.  相似文献   

16.
Thermal and chemical unfolding studies of the calcium-binding canine lysozyme (CL) by fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy show that, upon unfolding in the absence of calcium ions, a very stable equilibrium intermediate state is formed. At room temperature and pH 7.5, for example, a stable molten globule state is attained in 3 M GdnHCl. The existence of such a pure and stable intermediate state allowed us to extend classical stopped-flow fluorescence measurements that describe the transition from the native to the unfolded form, with kinetic experiments that monitor separately the transition from the unfolded to the intermediate state and from the intermediate to the native state, respectively. The overall refolding kinetics of apo-canine lysozyme are characterized by a significant drop in the fluorescence intensity during the dead time, followed by a monoexponential increase of the fluorescence with k = 3.6 s(-1). Furthermore, the results show that, unlike its drastic effect on the stability, Ca(2+)-binding only marginally affects the refolding kinetics. During the refolding process of apo-CL non-native interactions, comparable to those observed in hen egg white lysozyme, are revealed by a substantial quenching of tryptophan fluorescence. The dissection of the refolding process in two distinct steps shows that these non-native interactions only occur in the final stage of the refolding process in which the two domains match to form the native conformation.  相似文献   

17.
Satumba WJ  Mossing MC 《Biochemistry》2002,41(48):14216-14224
Cro binds to operator sites in lambda DNA as a dimer. Dimerization of this small repressor protein is weak, however, and proline residues in the dimer interface suggest that folding and assembly of active repressors may be complex. Cro and selected variants have been studied by circular dichroism and fluorescence. Fluorescent probes include a unique tryptophan residue in the dimer interface and extrinsic resonance energy transfer probes that monitor dimerization. Both folding and unfolding are characterized by two distinct kinetic phases. Fast processes that are complete within the 5-10 ms dead time of stopped flow experiments account for the majority of the change in the CD signal and abrupt changes in both tryptophan fluorescence and energy transfer. The slow phases show all the hallmarks of proline isomerization. The rates of the slow phases are between 0.005 and 0.02 s(-1), are relatively independent of protein and denaturant concentration, display activation energies of 20 kcal/mol, and are accelerated by the peptidyl-prolyl isomerase SlyD. Although CD measurements indicate that more than 70% of the secondary structure is regained in the refolding burst phase, intermolecular fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments indicate that less than 25% of these subunits are assembled into dimers. Full folding and dimerization requires isomerization of the non-native prolyl isomers over hundreds of seconds.  相似文献   

18.
We report the combined use of real-time photo-CIDNP NMR and stopped-flow fluorescence techniques to study the kinetic refolding of a set of mutants of a small globular protein, HPr, in which each of the four phenylalanine residues has in turn been replaced by a tryptophan residue. The results indicate that after refolding is initiated, the protein collapses around at least three, and possibly all four, of the side-chains of these residues, as (i) the observation of transient histidine photo-CIDNP signals during refolding of three of the mutants (F2W, F29W, and F48W) indicates a strong decrease in tryptophan accessibility to the flavin dye; (ii) iodide quenching experiments show that the quenching of the fluorescence of F48W is less efficient for the species formed during the dead-time of the stopped-flow experiment than for the fully native state; and (iii) kinetic fluorescence anisotropy measurements show that the tryptophan side-chain of F48W has lower mobility in the dead-time intermediate state than in both the fully denatured and fully native states. The hydrophobic collapse observed for HPr during the early stages of its folding appears to act primarily to bury hydrophobic residues. This process may be important in preventing the protein from aggregating prior to the acquisition of native-like structure in which hydrophobic residues are exposed in order to play their role in the function of the protein. The phenylalanine residue at position 48 is likely to be of particular interest in this regard as it is involved in the binding to enzymes I and II that mediates the transfer of a phosphoryl group between the two enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Sridevi K  Udgaonkar JB 《Biochemistry》2002,41(5):1568-1578
The folding and unfolding rates of the small protein, barstar, have been monitored using stopped-flow measurements of intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence at 25 degrees C, pH 8.5, and have been compared over a wide range of urea and guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) concentrations. When the logarithms of the rates of folding from urea and from GdnHCl unfolded forms are extrapolated linearly with denaturant concentration, the same rate is obtained for folding in zero denaturant. Similar linear extrapolations of rates of unfolding in urea and GdnHCl yield, however, different unfolding rates in zero denaturant, indicating that such linear extrapolations are not valid. It has been difficult, for any protein, to determine unfolding rates under nativelike conditions in direct kinetic experiments. Using a novel strategy of coupling the reactivity of a buried cysteine residue with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) to the unfolding reaction of barstar, the global unfolding and refolding rates have now been determined in low denaturant concentrations. The logarithms of unfolding rates obtained at low urea and GdnHCl concentrations show a markedly nonlinear dependence on denaturant concentration and converge to the same unfolding rate in the absence of denaturant. It is shown that the native protein can sample the fully unfolded conformation even in the absence of denaturant. The observed nonlinear dependences of the logarithms of the refolding and unfolding rates observed for both denaturants are shown to be due to the presence of (un)folding intermediates and not due to movements in the position of the transition state with a change in denaturant concentration.  相似文献   

20.
Anticoagulation factor I (ACF I) isolated from the venom of Agkistrodon acutus is an activated coagulation factor X-binding protein in a Ca(2+)-dependent fashion with marked anticoagulant activity. The equilibrium unfolding/refolding of apo-ACF I, holo-ACF I, and Tb(3+)-reconstituted ACF I in guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) solutions was studied by following the fluorescence and circular dichroism. Metal ions were found to increase the structural stability of ACF I against GdnHCl and thermal denaturation and, furthermore, influence its unfolding/refolding behavior. The GdnHCl-induced unfolding/refolding of both apo-ACF I and Tb(3+)-ACF I is a two-state process with no detectable intermediate state(s), whereas the GdnHCl-induced unfolding/refolding of holo-ACF I in the presence of 1 mM Ca(2+) follows a three-step transition, with intermediate state a (Ia) and intermediate state b (Ib). Ca(2+) ions play an important role in the stabilization of the Ia and Ib states. The decalcification of holo-ACF I shifts the ending zone of unfolding/refolding curve toward lower GdnHCl concentration, whereas the reconstitution of apo-ACF I with Tb(3+) ions shifts the initial zone of denaturation curve toward higher GdnHCl concentration. Therefore, it is possible to find a denaturant concentration (2.0 M GdnHCl) at which refolding from the fully denatured state of apo-ACF I to the Ib state of holo-ACF I or to the native state of Tb(3+)-ACF I can be initiated merely by adding the 1 mM Ca(2+) ions or 10 microM Tb(3+) ions to the unfolded state of apo-ACF I, respectively, without changing the concentration of the denaturant. Using Tb(3+) as a fluorescence probe of Ca(2+), the kinetic results of metal ions-induced refolding provide evidence that the compact Tb(3+)-binding region forms first, and subsequently, the protein undergoes further conformational rearrangements to form the native structure.  相似文献   

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