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1.
We present the first single-molecule atomic force microscopy study on the effect of chemical denaturants on the mechanical folding/unfolding kinetics of a small protein GB1 (the B1 immunoglobulin-binding domain of protein G from Streptococcus). Upon increasing the concentration of the chemical denaturant guanidinium chloride (GdmCl), we observed a systematic decrease in the mechanical stability of GB1, indicating the softening effect of the chemical denaturant on the mechanical stability of proteins. This mechanical softening effect originates from the reduced free-energy barrier between the folded state and the unfolding transition state, which decreases linearly as a function of the denaturant concentration. Chemical denaturants, however, do not alter the mechanical unfolding pathway or shift the position of the transition state for mechanical unfolding. We also found that the folding rate constant of GB1 is slowed down by GdmCl in mechanical folding experiments. By combining the mechanical folding/unfolding kinetics of GB1 in GdmCl solution, we developed the “mechanical chevron plot” as a general tool to understand how chemical denaturants influence the mechanical folding/unfolding kinetics and free-energy diagram in a quantitative fashion. This study demonstrates great potential in combining chemical denaturation with single-molecule atomic force microscopy techniques to reveal invaluable information on the energy landscape underlying protein folding/unfolding reactions.  相似文献   

2.
Chemical denaturants are frequently used to unfold proteins and to characterize mechanisms and transition states of protein folding reactions. The molecular basis of the effect of urea and guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) on polypeptide chains is still not well understood. Models for denaturant--protein interaction include both direct binding and indirect changes in solvent properties. Here we report studies on the effect of urea and GdmCl on the rate constants (k(c)) of end-to-end diffusion in unstructured poly(glycine-serine) chains of different length. Urea and GdmCl both lead to a linear decrease of lnk(c) with denaturant concentration, as observed for the rate constants for protein folding. This suggests that the effect of denaturants on chain dynamics significantly contributes to the denaturant-dependence of folding rate constants for small proteins. We show that this linear dependency is the result of two additive non-linear effects, namely increased solvent viscosity and denaturant binding. The contribution from denaturant binding can be quantitatively described by Schellman's weak binding model with binding constants (K) of 0.62(+/-0.01)M(-1) for GdmCl and 0.26(+/-0.01)M(-1) for urea. In our model peptides the number of binding sites and the effect of a bound denaturant molecule on chain dynamics is identical for urea and GdmCl. The results further identify the polypeptide backbone as the major denaturant binding site and give an upper limit of a few nanoseconds for residence times of denaturant molecules on the polypeptide chain.  相似文献   

3.
We have carried out equilibrium studies of the effect of the amino acid residue difference in the primary structure of bovine cytochrome-c (b-cyt-c) and horse cyt-c (h-cyt-c) on the mechanism of their folding <--> unfolding processes at pH 6.0 and 25 degrees C. It has been observed that guanidinium chloride (GdmCl)-induced denaturation of b-cyt-c follows a two-state mechanism and that of h-cyt-c is not a two-state process. This conclusion is reached from the coincidence and non-coincidence of GdmCl-induced transition curves of bovine and horse proteins, respectively, monitored by measurements of absorbance at 405, 530 and 695 nm and circular dichroism (CD) at 222, 416 and 405 nm. These measurements on h-cyt-c in the presence of GdmCl in the concentration range 0.75-2.0 M also suggest that the protein retains all the native far-UV CD but has slightly perturbed tertiary interaction. The intermediate in the presence of these low denaturant concentrations does not have the structural characteristics of a molten globule as judged by the 8-Anilino-1-napthalene sulfonic acid (ANS) binding and near-UV CD experiments. We have also carried out thermal denaturation studies of bovine and horse cyts-c in the presence of GdmCl monitored by absorbance at 405 nm and far-UV CD at 222 nm. The heat-induced denaturation measurements in the presence of the denaturant show (1) that denaturation of b-cyt-c is a two-state process and that of h-cyt-c does not follow a two-state mechanism, and (2) that the enthalpy change on denaturation of both proteins strongly depends on GdmCl concentration.  相似文献   

4.
Proteins folding according to a classical two-state system characteristically show V-shaped chevron plots. We have previously interpreted the symmetrically curved chevron plot of the protein U1A as denaturant-dependent movements in the position of the transition state ensemble (TSE). S6, a structural analog of U1A, shows a classical V-shaped chevron plot indicative of straightforward two-state kinetics, but the mutant LA30 has a curved unfolding limb, which is most consistent with TSE mobility. The kinetic m-values (derivatives of the rate constants with respect to denaturant concentration) in themselves depend on denaturant concentration. To obtain complementary information about putative mobile TSEs, we have carried out a thermodynamic analysis of the three proteins, based on data for refolding and unfolding over the range 10 degrees C to 70 degrees C. The data at all temperatures can be fitted to two-state model systems. Importantly, for all three proteins the activation heat capacities are, within error, identical to the heat capacities measured in independent experiments under equilibrium conditions. Although the equilibrium heat capacities are essentially invariant with regard to denaturant concentration, the activation heat capacities, similar to the structurally equivalent kinetic m-values, show marked denaturant dependence. Furthermore, the values of beta++ at different denaturant concentrations measured by m-values and by heat capacity values are very similar. These observations are consistent with significant transition state movements within the framework of two-state folding. The basis for TSE movement appears to be enthalpic rather than entropic, suggesting that the binding energy of denaturant-protein interactions is a major determinant of the response of energy landscape contours to changing environments.  相似文献   

5.
The denatured states of a small globular protein, apo-neocarzinostatin (NCS), have been characterized using several techniques. Structural properties were investigated by optical spectroscopy techniques and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), as a function of guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) concentration. SANS experiments show that in heavy water, the protein keeps its native size at GdmCl concentrations below 2.5 M. A sharp transition occurs at about 3.6 M GdmCl, and NCS behaves like an excluded volume chain above 5 M. The same behavior is observed in deuterated buffer by fluorescence and circular dichroism measurements. For the H(2)O buffer, the transition occurs with lower concentration of denaturant, the shift being about 0.6 M. 8-Anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS) was used as a hydrophobic fluorescent probe for studying the early stages of protein unfolding. Protein denaturation modifies the fluorescence intensity of ANS, a maximum of intensity being detected close to 2 M GdmCl in hydrogenated buffer, which shows the existence of at least one intermediate state populated at the beginning of the unfolding pathway. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) was used to obtain thermodynamic values for NCS denaturation. The melting curves recorded between 20 and 90 degrees C in the presence of various GdmCl concentrations (0-3 M) cannot be explained by a simple two-state model. Altogether, the data presented in this paper suggest that before unfolding the protein explores a distribution of states which is centered around compact states at denaturant concentrations below 2 M in H(2)O, and then shifts to less structured states by increasing denaturant concentrations.  相似文献   

6.
The multi-domain enzyme isocitrate dehydrogenase from the hyperthermophile Aeropyrum pernix was studied by denaturant-induced unfolding. At pH 7.5, changes in circular dichroism ellipticity and intrinsic fluorescence showed a complex unfolding transition, whereas at pH 3.0, an apparently two-state and highly reversible unfolding occurred. Analytical ultracentrifugation revealed the dissociation from dimer to monomer at pH 3.0. The thermodynamic and kinetic stability were studied at pH 3.0 to explore the role of inter-domain interactions independently of inter-subunit interplay on the wild type and R211M, a mutant where a seven-membered inter-domain ionic network has been disrupted. The unfolding and folding transitions occurred at slightly different denaturant concentrations even after prolonged equilibration time. The difference between the folding and the unfolding profiles was decreased in the mutant R211M. The apparent Gibbs free energy decreased approximately 2 kcal/mol and the unfolding rate increased 4.3-fold in the mutant protein, corresponding to a decrease in activation free energy of unfolding of 0.86 kcal/mol. These results suggest that the inter-domain ionic network might be responsible for additional stabilization through a significant kinetic barrier in the unfolding pathway that could also explain the larger difference observed between the folding and unfolding transitions of the wild type.  相似文献   

7.
K Sasahara  M Sakurai  K Nitta 《Proteins》2001,44(3):180-187
The influence of hydrostatic pressure (< or =100 MPa) on denaturant-induced unfolding of hen egg white lysozyme was investigated by means of ultraviolet spectroscopy at various temperatures. Assuming a two-state transition model, the dependence of Gibbs free-energy change of unfolding on the denaturant concentration was calculated. Under applied hydrostatic pressure, these data were interpreted as suggesting that a two-state model is not applicable in a restricted temperature range; the dominant effect of hydrostatic pressure is to affect the cooperativity in protein unfolding due to a chemical equilibrium shift in the direction of the reduction in the system volume. The deviation from the two-state transition model appears to be rationalized by assuming that applied pressure induces an intermediate conformation between the native and unfolded states of the protein. The implication of the thermodynamic stability of protein under pressure was discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Spherulin 3a (S3a) from Physarum polycephalum represents the only known single-domain member of the superfamily of beta gamma eye-lens crystallins. It shares the typical two Greek-key motif and is stabilized by dimerization and Ca(2+)-binding. The temperature and denaturant-induced unfolding of S3a in the absence and in the presence of Ca2+ were investigated by differential scanning calorimetry and fluorescence spectroscopy. To accomplish reversibility without chemical modification of the protein during thermal denaturation, the only cysteine residue (Cys4) was substituted by serine; apart from that, the protein was destabilized by adding 0.5-1.8 M guanidinium chloride (GdmCl). The Cys4Ser mutant was found to be indistinguishable from natural S3a. The equilibrium unfolding transitions obey the two-state model according to N2-->2 U, allowing thermodynamic parameters to be determined by linear extrapolation to zero GdmCl concentration. The corresponding transition temperatures TM for the Ca(2+)-free and Ca(2+)-loaded protein were found to be 65 and 85 degrees C, the enthalpy changes delta Hcal, 800 and 1280 kJ/mol(dimer), respectively. The strong dependencies of TM and delta Hcal on the GdmCl concentration allow the molar heat capacity change delta Cp to be determined. As a result, delta Cp = 18 kJ/(K mol(dimer)) was calculated independent of Ca2+. No significant differences were obtained between the free energy delta G degree calculated from delta Hcal and TM, and extrapolated from the stability curves in the presence of different amounts of denaturant. The free energy derived from thermal unfolding was confirmed by the spectral results obtained from GdmCl-induced equilibrium transitions at different temperatures for the Ca(2+)-free or the Ca(2+)-loaded protein, respectively. Within the limits of error, the delta G degree values extrapolated from the transitions of chemical denaturation to zero denaturant concentration are identical with the calorimetric results.  相似文献   

9.
Inactivation, dissociation, and unfolding of the homodimeric glutathione transferase (bbGSTP1-1) from Bufo bufo embryos were investigated at equilibrium, using guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) as denaturant. Protein transitions were monitored by enzyme activity, intrinsic fluorescence, far UV circular dichroism, glutaraldehyde cross-linking, and gel-filtration chromatography. At low denaturant concentrations (less than 0.5 M), reversible inactivation of the enzyme occurs. At denaturant concentrations between 0.5 and 1.5 M the enzyme progressively dissociates into structured monomers. At higher denaturant concentrations the monomers unfold completely. Refolding studies indicate that a total reactivation occurs only by starting from the enzyme denatured at concentrations below 0.5 M. The enzyme denatured at GdmCl concentrations higher than 0.5 M only partially refolds. Globally our results indicate that unfolding of the amphibian bbGSTP1-1 is a multistep process, i.e., inactivation of the structured dimer, dissociation into partially structured monomers, followed by complete unfolding.  相似文献   

10.
Cellulases are increasingly being used for industrial purposes, particularly in washing powders, yet little is known of the factors governing the stability of proteins in detergent solutions. We present a comparative analysis of the behavior of the cellulase Cel45 from Humicola insolens in the presence of the denaturant guanidinium chloride and the anionic detergent C12-LAS. Although Cel45 unfolds in GdmCl according to a simple two-state model under equilibrium conditions, it accumulates a transient intermediate during refolding. The four disulfide bonds do not contribute detectably to the stability of the native state. Cel45 is unfolded by very low concentrations of C12-LAS (1-4 mM). An analysis of 16 mutants of Cel45 shows a very weak correlation between unfolding rates in denaturant and detergent; mutants that have the same unfolding rate in GdmCl (within a factor of 1.5) vary 1,000-fold in their unfolding rates in C12-LAS. The data support a simple model for unfolding by detergent, in which the introduction of positive charges or removal of negative charges greatly increases detergent sensitivity, while interactions with the hydrophobic detergent tail contribute to a smaller extent. This implies that different detergent-mediated unfolding pathways exist, whose accessibilities depend on individual residues. Double-mutant cycles reveal that mutations in two proximal residues lead to repulsion and a destabilization greater than the sum of the individual mutations as measured by GdmCl denaturation, but they also reduce the affinity for LAS and therefore actually stabilize the protein relative to wild-type. Ligands that interact strongly with the denatured state may therefore alter the unfolding process.  相似文献   

11.
12.
N52I iso-2 cytochrome c is a variant of yeast iso-2 cytochrome c in which asparagine substitutes for isoleucine 52 in an alpha helical segment composed of residues 49-56. The N52I substitution results in a significant increase in both stability and cooperativity of equilibrium unfolding, and acts as a "global suppressor" of destabilizing mutations. The equilibrium m-value for denaturant-induced unfolding of N52I iso-2 increases by 30%, a surprisingly large amount for a single residue substitution. The folding/unfolding kinetics for N52I iso-2 have been measured by stopped-flow mixing and by manual mixing, and are compared to the kinetics of folding/unfolding of wild-type protein, iso-2 cytochrome c. The results show that the observable folding rate and the guanidine hydrochloride dependence of the folding rate are the same for iso-2 and N52I iso-2, despite the greater thermodynamic stability of N52I iso-2. Thus, there is no linear free-energy relationship between mutation-induced changes in stability and observable refolding rates. However, for N52I iso-2 the unfolding rate is slower and the guanidine hydrochloride dependence of the unfolding rate is smaller than for iso-2. The differences in the denaturant dependence of the unfolding rates suggest that the N52I substitution decreases the change in the solvent accessible hydrophobic surface between the native state and the transition state. Two aspects of the results are inconsistent with a two-state folding/unfolding mechanism and imply the presence of folding intermediates: (1) observable refolding rate constants calculated from the two-state mechanism by combining equilibrium data and unfolding rate measurements deviate from the observed refolding rate constants; (2) kinetically unresolved signal changes ("burst phase") are observed for both N52I iso-2 and iso-2 refolding. The "burst phase" amplitude is larger for N52I iso-2 than for iso-2, suggesting that the intermediates formed during the "burst phase" are stabilized by the N52I substitution.  相似文献   

13.
The protein moiety of the Braun's E. coli outer membrane lipoprotein (Lpp-56) is an attractive object of biophysical investigation in several aspects. It is a homotrimeric, parallel coiled coil, a class of coiled coils whose stability and folding have been studied only occasionally. Lpp-56 possesses unique structural properties and exhibits extremely low rates of folding and unfolding. It is natural to ask how the specificity of the structure determines the extraordinary physical chemical properties of this protein. Recently, a seemingly controversial data on the stability and unfolding rate of Lpp-56 have been published (Dragan et al., Biochemistry 2004;43: 14891-14900; Bjelic et al., Biochemistry 2006;45:8931-8939). The unfolding rate constant measured using GdmCl as the denaturing agent, though extremely low, was substantially higher than that obtained on the basis of thermal unfolding. If this large difference arises from the effect of screening of electrostatic interactions induced by GdmCl, electrostatic interactions would appear to be an important factor determining the unusual properties of Lpp-56. We present here a computational analysis of the electrostatic properties of Lpp-56 combining molecular dynamics simulations and continuum pK calculations. The pH-dependence of the unfolding free energy is predicted in good agreement with the experimental data: the change in DeltaG between pH 3 and pH 7 is approximately 60 kJ mol(-1). The results suggest that the difference in the stability of the protein observed using different experimental methods is mainly because of the effect of the reduction of electrostatic interactions when the salt (GdmCl) concentration increases. We also find that the occupancy of the interhelical salt bridges is unusually high. We hypothesize that electrostatic interactions, and the interhelical salt bridges in particular, are an important factor determining the low unfolding rate of Lpp-56.  相似文献   

14.
Sasahara K  Nitta K 《Proteins》2006,63(1):127-135
The equilibrium and kinetics of folding of hen egg-white lysozyme were studied by means of CD spectroscopy in the presence of varying concentrations of ethanol under acidic condition. The equilibrium transition curves of guanidine hydrochloride-induced unfolding in 13 and 26% (v/v) ethanol have shown that the unfolding significantly deviates from a two-state mechanism. The kinetics of denaturant-induced refolding and unfolding of hen egg-white lysozyme were investigated by stopped-flow CD at three ethanol concentrations: 0, 13, and 26% (v/v). Immediately after dilution of the denaturant, the refolding curves showed a biphasic time course in the far-UV region, with a burst phase with a significant secondary structure and a slower observable phase. However, when monitored by the near-UV CD, the burst phase was not observed and all refolding kinetics were monophasic. To clarify the effect of nonnative secondary structure induced by the addition of ethanol on the folding/unfolding kinetics, the kinetic m values were estimated from the chevron plots obtained for the three ethanol concentrations. The data indicated that the folding/unfolding kinetics of hen lysozyme in the presence of varying concentrations of ethanol under acidic condition is explained by a model with both on-pathway and off-pathway intermediates of protein folding.  相似文献   

15.
To search for folding intermediates, we have examined the folding and unfolding kinetics of wild-type barnase and four representative mutants under a wide range of conditions that span two-state and multi-state kinetics. The choice of mutants and conditions provided in-built controls for artifacts that might distort the interpretation of kinetics, such as the non-linearity of kinetic and equilibrium data with concentration of denaturant. We measured unfolding rate constants over a complete range of denaturant concentration by using by 1H/2H-exchange kinetics under conditions that favour folding, conventional stopped-flow methods at higher denaturant concentrations and continuous flow. Under conditions that favour multi-state kinetics, plots of the rate constants for unfolding against denaturant concentration fitted quantitatively to the equation for three-state kinetics, with a sigmoid component for a change of rate determining step, as did the refolding kinetics. The position of the transition state on the reaction pathway, as measured by solvent exposure (the Tanford beta value) also moved with denaturant concentration, fitting quantitatively to the same equations with a change of rate determining step. The sigmoid behaviour disappeared under conditions that favoured two-state kinetics. Those data combined with direct structural observations and simulation support a minimal reaction pathway for the folding of barnase that involves two detectable folding intermediates. The first intermediate, I(1), is the denatured state under physiological conditions, D(Phys), which has native-like topology, is lower in energy than the random-flight denatured state U and is suggested by molecular dynamics simulation of unfolding to be on-pathway. The second intermediate, I(2), is high energy, and is proven by the change in rate determining step in the unfolding kinetics to be on-pathway. The change in rate determining step in unfolding with structure or environment reflects the change in partitioning of this intermediate to products or starting materials.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The dinuclear copper center (TtCuA) forming the electron entry site in the subunit II of the cytochrome c oxidase in Thermus thermophilus shows high stability toward thermal as well as denaturant-induced unfolding of the protein at ambient pH. We have studied the effect of pH on the stability of the holo-protein as well as of the apo-protein by UV-visible absorption, far-UV, and visible circular dichroism spectroscopy. The results show that the holo-protein both in the native mixed-valence state as well as in the reduced state of the metal ions and the apo-protein of TtCuA were extremely stable toward unfolding by guanidine hydrochloride at ambient pH. The thermal unfolding studies at different values of pH suggested that decreasing pH had almost no effect on the thermal stability of the protein in the absence of the denaturant. However, the stability of the proteins in presence of the denaturant was considerably decreased on lowering the pH. Moreover, the stability of the holo-protein in the reduced state of the metal ion was found to be lower than that in the mixed-valence state at the same pH. The denaturant-induced unfolding of the protein at different values of pH was analyzed using a two-state unfolding model. The values of the free energy of unfolding were found to increase with pH. The holo-protein showed that the variation of the unfolding free energy was associated with a pKa of approximately 5.5. This is consistent with the model that the protonation of a histidine residue may be responsible for the decrease in the stability of the holo-protein at low pH. The results were interpreted in the light of the reported crystal structure of the protein.  相似文献   

18.
FIS, the factor for inversion stimulation, from Escherichia coli and other enteric bacteria, is an interwined alpha-helical homodimer. Size exclusion chromatography and static light scattering measurements demonstrated that FIS is predominately a stable dimer at the concentrations (1-10 microM monomer) and buffer conditions employed in this study. The folding and unfolding of FIS were studied with both equilibrium and kinetic methods by circular dichroism using urea and guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) as the perturbants. The equilibrium folding is reversible and well-described by a two-state folding model, with stabilities at 10 degrees C of 15.2 kcal mol(-1) in urea and 13.5 kcal mol(-1) in GdmCl. The kinetic data are consistent with a two-step folding reaction where the two unfolded monomers associate to a dimeric intermediate within the mixing time for the stopped-flow instrument (<5 ms), and a slower, subsequent folding of the dimeric intermediate to the native dimer. Fits of the burst phase amplitudes as a function of denaturant showed that the free energy for the formation of the dimeric intermediate constitutes the majority of the stability of the folding (9.6 kcal mol(-1) in urea and 10.5 kcal mol(-1) in GdmCl). Folding-to-unfolding double jump kinetic experiments were also performed to monitor the formation of native dimer as a function of folding delay times. The data here demonstrate that the dimeric intermediate is obligatory and on-pathway. The folding mechanism of FIS, when compared to other intertwined, alpha-helical, homodimers, suggests that a transient kinetic dimeric intermediate may be a common feature of the folding of intertwined, segment-swapped, alpha-helical dimers.  相似文献   

19.
The denaturant-induced (un)folding of apoflavodoxin from Azotobacter vinelandii has been followed at the residue level by NMR spectroscopy. NH groups of 21 residues of the protein could be followed in a series of 1H-15N heteronuclear single-quantum coherence spectra recorded at increasing concentrations of guanidinium hydrochloride despite the formation of protein aggregate. These NH groups are distributed throughout the whole apoflavodoxin structure. The midpoints of unfolding determined by NMR coincide with the one obtained by fluorescence emission spectroscopy. Both techniques give rise to unfolding curves with transition zones at significantly lower denaturant concentrations than the one obtained by circular dichroism spectroscopy. The NMR (un)folding data support a mechanism for apoflavodoxin folding in which a relatively stable intermediate is involved. Native apoflavodoxin is shown to cooperatively unfold to a molten globule-like state with extremely broadened NMR resonances. This initial unfolding step is slow on the NMR chemical shift timescale. The subsequent unfolding of the molten globule is faster on the NMR chemical shift timescale and the limited appearance of 1H-15N HSQC cross peaks of unfolded apoflavodoxin in the denaturant range studied indicates that it is noncooperative.  相似文献   

20.
The equilibrium unfolding of calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase in guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) solutions was studied by following the fluorescence and ultraviolet difference spectra. At low concentrations of GdmCl (< 1.6 M), the fluorescence intensity decreased with a slight red shift of the emission maximum from 332 nm to 344 nm. An unfolding intermediate state was observed at a broad concentration range of GdmCl as a denaturant (between 1.6 and 2.6 M). This intermediate was characterized by increased fluorescence emission intensity, ultraviolet difference absorption at 236 nm and 260 nm, as well as increased binding to the protein and red shift of the fluorescence probe 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid.  相似文献   

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