首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Iimura S  Yagi H  Ogasahara K  Akutsu H  Noda Y  Segawa S  Yutani K 《Biochemistry》2004,43(37):11906-11915
The refolding rate of heat-denatured cysteine-free pyrrolidone carboxyl peptidase (PCP-0SH) from Pyrococcus furiosus has been reported to be unusually slow under some conditions. To elucidate the structural basis of the unusually slow kinetics of the protein, the denaturation and refolding processes of the PCP-0SH were investigated using a real-time 2D (1)H-(15)N HSQC and CD experiments. At 2 M urea denaturation of the PCP-0SH in the acidic region, all of the native peaks in the 2D HSQC spectrum completely disappeared. The conformation of the PCP-0SH just after removal of 6 M GuHCl could be observed as a stable intermediate (D(1) state) in 2D HSQC and CD experiments, which is similar to a molten globule structure. The D(1) state of the PCP-0SH, which is the initial state of refolding, corresponded to the state at 2 M urea and seemed to be the denatured state in equilibrium with the native state under the physiological conditions. The refolding of PCP-0SH from the D(1) state to the native state could be observed to be highly cooperative without any intermediates between them, even if the refolding rate was quite slow. In the higher concentration of denaturants, PCP-0SH showed HSQC and CD spectra characteristic of completely unfolded proteins called the D(2) state. The unusually slow refolding rate was discussed as originating in the conformations in the transition state and/or the retardation of reorganization in an ensemble of nonrandom denatured structures in the D(1) state.  相似文献   

2.
Mukaiyama A  Takano K  Haruki M  Morikawa M  Kanaya S 《Biochemistry》2004,43(43):13859-13866
Equilibrium and kinetic studies were carried out under denaturation conditions to clarify the energetic features of the high stability of a monomeric protein, ribonuclease HII, from a hyperthermophile, Thermococcus kodakaraensis (Tk-RNase HII). Guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl)-induced unfolding and refolding were measured with circular dichroism at 220 nm, and heat-induced denaturation was studied with differential scanning calorimetry. Both GdnHCl- and heat-induced denaturation are very reversible. It was difficult to obtain the equilibrated unfolding curve of Tk-RNase HII below 40 degrees C, because of the remarkably slow unfolding. The two-state unfolding and refolding reactions attained equilibrium at 50 degrees C after 2 weeks. The Gibbs energy change of GdnHCl-induced unfolding (DeltaG(H(2)O)) at 50 degrees C was 43.6 kJ mol(-1). The denaturation temperature in the DSC measurement shifted as a function of the scan rate; the denaturation temperature at a scan rate of 90 degrees C h(-1) was higher than at a scan rate of 5 degrees C h(-1). The unfolding and refolding kinetics of Tk-RNase HII were approximated as a first-order reaction. The ln k(u) and ln k(r) values depended linearly on the denaturant concentration between 10 and 50 degrees C. The DeltaG(H(2)O) value obtained from the rate constant in water using the two-state model at 50 degrees C, 44.5 kJ mol(-1), was coincident with that from the equilibrium study, 43.6 kJ mol(-1), suggesting the two-state folding of Tk-RNase HII. The values for the rate constant in water of the unfolding for Tk-RNase HII were much smaller than those of E. coli RNase HI and Thermus thermophilus RNase HI, which has a denaturation temperature similar to that of Tk-RNase HII. In contrast, little difference was observed in the refolding rates among these proteins. These results indicate that the stabilization mechanism of monomeric protein from a hyperthermophile, Tk-RNase HII, with reversible two-state folding is characterized by remarkably slow unfolding.  相似文献   

3.
Pyrrolidone carboxyl peptidases (PCPs) from hyperthermophiles have a structurally conserved and completely buried Glu192 in the hydrophobic core; in contrast, the corresponding residue in the mesophile protein is a hydrophobic residue, Ile. Does the buried ionizable residue contribute to stabilization or destabilization of hyperthermophile PCPs? To elucidate the role of the buried glutamic acid in stabilizing PCP from hyperthermophiles, we constructed five Glu192 mutants of PCP-0SH (C142S/C188S, Cys-free double mutant of PCP) from Pyrococcus furiosus and examined their thermal and pH-induced unfolding and crystal structures and compared them with those of PCP-0SH. The stabilities of apolar (E192A/I/V) and polar (E192D/Q) mutants were less than PCP-0SH at acidic pH values. In the alkaline region, the mutant proteins, except for E192D, were more stable than PCP-0SH. The thermal stability data and theoretical calculations indicated an apparent pKa value > or = 7.3 for Glu192. Present results confirmed that the protonated Glu192 in PCP-0SH forms strong hydrogen bonds with the carbonyl oxygen and peptide nitrogen of Pro168. New intermolecular hydrogen bonds in the E --> A/D mutants were formed by a water molecule introduced into the cavity created around position 192, whereas the hydrogen bonds disappeared in the E --> I/V mutants. Structure-based empirical stability of mutant proteins was in good agreement with the experimental results. The results indicated that (1) completely buried Glu192 contributes to the stabilization of PCP-0SH because of the formation of strong intramolecular hydrogen bonds and (2) the hydrogen bonds by the nonionized and buried Glu can contribute more than the burial of hydrophobic groups to the conformational stability of proteins.  相似文献   

4.
The cysteine-free pyrrolidone carboxyl peptidase (PCP-0SH) from a hyperthermophile, Pyrococcus furiosus, can be trapped in the denatured state under nondenaturing conditions, corresponding to the denatured structure that exists in equilibrium with the native state under physiological conditions. The denatured state is the initial state (D1 state) in the refolding process but differs from the completely denatured state (D2 state) in the concentrated denaturant. Also, it has been found that the D1 state corresponds to the heat-denatured state. To elucidate the structural basis of the D1 state, H/D exchange experiments with PCP-0SH were performed at pD 3.4 and 4 degrees C. The results indicated that amide protons in the C-terminal alpha6-helix region hardly exchanged in the D1 state with deuterium even after 7 days, suggesting that the alpha6-helix (from Ser188 to Glu205) of PCP-0SH was stably formed in the D1 state. In order to examine the role of the alpha6-helix in folding and stability, H/D exchange experiments with a mutant, A199P, at position 199 in the alpha6-helix region were performed. The alpha6-helix region of A199P in the D1 state was partially unprotected, while some hydrophobic residues were protected against the H/D exchange, although these hydrophobic residues were unprotected in the wild-type protein. These results suggest that the structure of A199P in the D1 state formed a temporary stable denatured structure with a non-native hydrophobic cluster and the unstructured alpha6-helix. Both the stability and the refolding rate decreased by the substitution of Pro for Ala199. We can conclude that the native-like helix (alpha6-helix) of PCP-0SH is already constructed in the D1 state and is necessary for efficient refolding into the native structure and stabilization of PCP-0SH.  相似文献   

5.
The refolding of cysteine-free pyrrolidone carboxyl peptidase (PCP-0SH) from a hyperthermophile is unusually slow. PCP-0SH is trapped in the denatured (D1) state at 4 °C and pH 2.3, which is different from the highly denatured state in the presence of concentrated denaturant. In order to elucidate the mechanism of the unusually slow folding, we investigated the structure of the D1 state using NMR techniques with amino acid selectively labeled PCP-0SH. The HSQC spectrum of the D1 state showed that most of the resonances arising from the 114-208 residues are broadened, indicating that conformations of the 114-208 residues are in intermediate exchange on the microsecond to millisecond time scale. Paramagnetic relaxation enhancement data indicated the lack of long-range interactions between the 1-113 and the 114-208 segments in the D1 state. Furthermore, proline scanning mutagenesis showed that the 114-208 segment in the D1 state forms a loosely packed hydrophobic core composed of α4- and α6-helices. From these findings, we conclude that the 114-208 segment of PCP-0SH folds into a stable compact structure with non-native helix-helix association in the D1 state. Therefore, in the folding process from the D1 state to the native state, the α4- and α6-helices become separated and the central β-sheet is folded between these helices. That is, the non-native interaction between the α4- and α6-helices may be responsible for the unusually slow folding of PCP-0SH.  相似文献   

6.
In order to elucidate the stabilization mechanism of CutA1 from Pyrococcus horikoshii (PhCutA1) with a denaturation temperature of nearly 150 degrees C, GuHCl denaturation and heat denaturation were examined at neutral and acidic pHs. As a comparison, CutA1 proteins from Thermus thermophilus (TtCutA1) and Oryza sativa (OsCutA1) were also examined, which have lower optimum growth temperatures of 75 and 28 degrees C, respectively, than that (98 degrees C) of P. horikoshii. GuHCl-induced unfolding and refolding curves of the three proteins showed hysteresis effects due to an unusually slow unfolding rate. The midpoints of refolding for PhCutA1, TtCutA1 and OsCutA1 were 5.7 M, 3.3 M, and 2.3 M GuHCl, respectively, at pH 8.0 and 37 degrees C. DSC experiments with TtCutA1 and OsCutA1 showed that the denaturation temperatures were remarkably high, 112.8 and 97.3 degrees C, respectively, at pH 7.0 and that the good heat reversibility was amenable to thermodynamic analyses. At acidic pH, TtCutA1 showed higher stability to both heat and denaturant than PhCutA1. Combined with the data for DSC and denaturant denaturation, the unfolding Gibbs energy of PhCutA1 could be depicted as a function of temperature. It was experimentally revealed that (1) the unusually high stability of PhCutA1 basically originates from a common trimer structure of the three proteins, (2) the stability of PhCutA1 is superior to those of the other two CutA1s over all temperatures above 0 degrees C at neutral pH, due to the decrease in both enthalpy and entropy, and (3) ion pairs of PhCutA1 contribute to the unusually high stability at neutral pH.  相似文献   

7.
Escherichia coli OmpA can be solubilized by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) in its folded structure, and it unfolds upon heating. Although the heat-denatured OmpA remains unfolded after lowering the temperature, the addition of a non-ionic surfactant, octyl glucoside results in refolding of unfolded OmpA. In the present study, we investigated the refolding kinetics of OmpA in a mixed surfactant system of SDS and octyl glucoside using far- and near-UV circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopies. We found four kinetic phases in the refolding reaction, which logarithmically depended on the weight fraction of octyl glucoside. We also examined the unfolding kinetics of OmpA upon heating in the presence of SDS by temperature jump experiments. A comparison of the rate constants for the refolding and the unfolding reactions in SDS-only solution at 30 degrees C revealed that the folded form of OmpA in SDS solution is less stable than the unfolding form, and that the unfolding is virtually unobservable near room temperature due to a high kinetic barrier.  相似文献   

8.
The kinetics and thermodynamics of the folding of the homologous four-helix proteins Im7 and Im9 have been characterised at pH 7.0 and 10 degrees C. These proteins are 60 % identical in sequence and have the same three-dimensional structure, yet appear to fold by different kinetic mechanisms. The logarithm of the folding and unfolding rates of Im9 change linearly as a function of urea concentration and fit well to an equation describing a two-state mechanism (with a folding rate of 1500 s-1, an unfolding rate of 0. 01 s-1, and a highly compact transition state that has approximately 95 % of the native surface area buried). By contrast, there is clear evidence for the population of an intermediate during the refolding of Im7, as indicated by a change in the urea dependence of the folding rate and the presence of a significant burst phase amplitude in the refolding kinetics. Under stabilising conditions (0.25 M Na2SO4, pH 7.0 and 10 degrees C) the folding of Im9 remains two-state, whilst under similar conditions (0.4 M Na2SO4, pH 7.0 and 10 degrees C) the intermediate populated during Im7 refolding is significantly stabilised (KUI=125). Equilibrium denaturation experiments, under the conditions used in the kinetic measurements, show that Im7 is significantly less stable than Im9 (DeltaDeltaG 9.3 kJ/mol) and the DeltaG and m values determined accord with those obtained from the fit to the kinetic data. The results show, therefore, that the population of an intermediate in the refolding of the immunity protein structure is defined by the precise amino acid sequence rather than the global stability of the protein. We discuss the possibility that the intermediate of Im7 is populated due to differences in helix propensity in Im7 and Im9 and the relevance of these data to the folding of helical proteins in general.  相似文献   

9.
10.
We describe the guanidinium hydrochloride induced folding kinetics of the four-helix-bundle protein Rop wild-type (wt) under equilibrium conditions at three temperatures. The choice of appropriate denaturant conditions inside the transition range permitted, in combination with equilibrium transition curves, the determination of both unfolding and refolding rate constants. The ratio of the rate constants at zero denaturant concentration provided equilibrium constants and standard free energy changes that are in good agreement with values obtained in previous differential scanning calorimetry studies. The DeltaG0D values for 19, 25 and 40 degrees C calculated from the present kinetic studies are, respectively, 66.8, 70.8 and 57.2 kJ.mol-1. The unfolding reactions are extremely slow under these conditions. Equilibrium was reached only after 18, 12 and 6 days at 19, 25 and 40 degrees C. These results demonstrate that for Rop wt high stability correlates with slow folding kinetics.  相似文献   

11.
Thermal and GdmCl-induced unfolding transitions of aldolase from Staphylococcus aureus are reversible under a variety of solvent conditions. Analysis of the transitions reveals that no partially folded intermediates can be detected under equilibrium conditions. The stability of the enzyme is very low with a delta G0 value of -9 +/- 2 kJ/mol at 20 degrees C. The kinetics of unfolding and refolding of aldolase are complex and comprise at least one fast and two slow reactions. This complexity arises from prolyl isomerization reactions in the unfolded chain, which are kinetically coupled to the actual folding reaction. Comparison with model calculations shows that at least two prolyl peptide bonds give rise to the observed slow folding reactions of aldolase and that all of the involved bonds are presumably in the trans conformation in the native state. The rate constant of the actual folding reaction is fast with a relaxation time of about 15 s at the midpoint of the folding transition at 15 degrees C. The data presented on the folding and stability of aldolase are comparable to the properties of much smaller proteins. This might be connected with the simple and highly repetitive tertiary structure pattern of the enzyme, which belongs to the group of alpha/beta barrel proteins.  相似文献   

12.
The annexins comprise a family of soluble Ca2+- and phospholipid-binding proteins. Although highly similar in three-dimensional structure, different annexins are likely to exhibit different biochemical and functional properties and to play different roles in various membrane related events. Since it must be expected that these functional differences arise from differences in the characteristic thermodynamic parameters of these proteins, we performed high-sensitivity differential scanning microcalorimetry (DSC) and isothermal guanidinium hydrochloride (GdnHCl)-induced unfolding studies on annexin I and compared its thermodynamic parameters with those of annexin V published previously. The DSC data were analyzed using a model that permits quantitative treatment of the irreversible reaction. It turned out, however, that provided a heating rate of 2 K min-1 is used, unfolding of annexin I can be described satisfactorily in terms of a simple two-state reaction. At pH 6.0 annexin I is characterized by the following thermodynamic parameters: t1/2=61.8 degrees C, DeltaHcal=824 kJ mol-1 and DeltaCp=19 kJ mol-1 K-1. These parameters result in a stability value of DeltaG0D (20 degrees C)=51 kJ mol-1. The GdnHCl induced isothermal unfolding of annexin I in Mes buffer (pH 6.0), yielded DeltaG0D (buffer) values of 48, 60 and 36 kJ mol-1 at 20, 12 and 5 degrees C, respectively. These DeltaG0D values are in reasonable agreement with the values obtained from the DSC studies. The comparison of annexin I and annexin V under identical conditions (pH 8.0 or pH 6.0) shows that despite the pronounced structural homology of these two members of the annexin familiy, the stability parameters are remarkably different. This difference in stability is consistent with and provides a thermodynamic basis for the potential different in vivo functions proposed for these two annexins.  相似文献   

13.
Clitocypin, a new type of cysteine proteinase inhibitor from the mushroom Clitocybe nebularis, is a 34-kDa homodimer lacking disulphide bonds, reported to have unusual stability properties. Sequence similarity is limited solely to certain proteins from mushrooms. Infrared spectroscopy shows that clitocypin is a high beta-structure protein which was lost at high temperatures. The far UV circular dichroism spectrum is not that of classical beta-structure, but similar to those of a group of small beta-strand proteins, with a peak at 189nm and a trough at 202nm. An aromatic peak at 232nm and infrared bands at 1633 and 1515cm(-1) associated with the peptide backbone and the tyrosine microenvironment, respectively, were used to characterize the thermal unfolding. The reversible transition has a midpoint at 67 degrees C, with DeltaG=34kJ/mol and DeltaH=300kJ/mol, and is, unusually, independent of protein concentration. The kinetics of thermal unfolding and refolding are slow, with activation energies of 167 and 44kJ/mol, respectively. A model for folding and assembly is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Lipocalin-type prostaglandin (PG) D synthase (L-PGDS) is a dual-functioning protein in the lipocalin family, acting as a PGD(2)-synthesizing enzyme and as an extracellular transporter for small lipophilic molecules. We earlier reported that denaturant-induced unfolding of L-PGDS follows a four-state pathway, including an activity-enhanced state and an inactive intermediate state. In this study, we investigated the thermal unfolding mechanism of L-PGDS by using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and CD spectroscopy. DSC measurements revealed that the thermal unfolding of L-PGDS was a completely reversible process at pH 4.0. The DSC curves showed no concentration dependency, demonstrating that the thermal unfolding of L-PGDS involved neither intermolecular interaction nor aggregation. On the basis of a simple two-state unfolding mechanism, the ratio of van't Hoff enthalpy (DeltaH(vH)) to calorimetric enthalpy (DeltaH(cal)) was below 1, indicating the presence of an intermediate state (I) between the native state (N) and unfolded state (U). Then, statistical thermodynamic analyses of a three-state unfolding process were performed. The heat capacity curves fit well with a three-state process; and the estimated transition temperature (T(m)) and enthalpy change (DeltaH(cal)) of the N<-->I and I<-->U transitions were 48.2 degrees C and 190 kJ.mol(-1), and 60.3 degrees C and 144 kJ.mol(-1), respectively. Correspondingly, the thermal unfolding monitored by CD spectroscopy at 200, 235 and 290 nm revealed that L-PGDS unfolded through the intermediate state, where its main chain retained the characteristic beta-sheet structure without side-chain interactions.  相似文献   

15.
ORF56 is a plasmid-encoded protein from Sulfolobus islandicus, which probably controls the copy number of the pRN1 plasmid by binding to its own promotor. The protein showed an extremely high stability in denaturant, heat, and pH-induced unfolding transitions, which can be well described by a two-state reaction between native dimers and unfolded monomers. The homodimeric character of native ORF56 was confirmed by analytical ultracentrifugation. Far-UV circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy gave superimposable denaturant-induced unfolding transitions and the midpoints of both heat as well as denaturant-induced unfolding depend on the protein concentration supporting the two-state model. This model was confirmed by GdmSCN-induced unfolding monitored by heteronuclear 2D NMR spectroscopy. Chemical denaturation was accomplished by GdmCl and GdmSCN, revealing a Gibbs free energy of stabilization of -85.1 kJ/mol at 25 degrees C. Thermal unfolding was possible only above 1 M GdmCl, which shifted the melting temperature (t(m)) below the boiling point of water. Linear extrapolation of t(m) to 0 M GdmCl yielded a t(m) of 107.5 degrees C (5 microM monomer concentration). Additionally, ORF56 remains natively structured over a remarkable pH range from pH 2 to pH 12. Folding kinetics were followed by far-UV CD and fluorescence after either stopped-flow or manual mixing. All kinetic traces showed only a single phase and the two probes revealed coincident folding rates (k(f), k(u)), indicating the absence of intermediates. Apparent first-order refolding rates depend linearly on the protein concentration, whereas the unfolding rates do not. Both lnk(f) and lnk(u) depend linearly on the GdmCl concentration. Together, folding and association of homodimeric ORF56 are concurrent events. In the absence of denaturant ORF56 refolds fast (7.0 x 10(7)M(-1)s(-1)) and unfolds extremely slowly (5.7 year(-1)). Therefore, high stability is coupled to a slow unfolding rate, which is often observed for proteins of extremophilic organisms.  相似文献   

16.
High-precision differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and circular dichroism (CD) have been employed to study the thermal unfolding of chitinase 40 (Chi40) from Streptomyces thermoviolaceus. Chi40 belongs to family 18 of glycosyl hydrolase superfamily bearing a catalytic domain with a "TIM barrel"-like fold, which exhibits deviations from the (beta/alpha)8 fold. The thermal unfolding is reversible at pH = 8.0 and 9.0. The denatured state is characterized by extensive structural changes with respect to the native. The process is characterized by slow relaxation kinetics. Even slower refolding rates are recorded upon cooling. It is shown that the denaturation calorimetric data obtained at slow heating rate (0.17 K/min) are in excellent agreement with equilibrium data obtained by extrapolation of the experimental results to zero scanning rate. Analysis of the DSC results reveals that the experimental data can be successfully fitted using either a non-two-state sequential model involving one equilibrium intermediate, or an independent transitions model involving the unfolding of two Chi40 energetic domains to intermediate states. The stability of the native state with respect to the final denatured state is estimated, deltaG = 24.0 kcal/mol at 25 degrees C. The thermal results are in agreement with previous findings from chemical denaturation studies of a wide variety of (beta/alpha)8 barrel proteins, that their unfolding is a non-two-state process, always involving at least one unfolding intermediate.  相似文献   

17.
Using computer simulations we have studied possible effects of heating and cooling at different scan rates on unfolding and refolding of macromolecules. We have shown that even the simplest two-state reversible transition can behave irreversibly when an unfavorable combination of cooling rate, relaxation time and activation energy of refolding occurs. On the basis of this finding we suppose that apparent irreversibility of some proteins denatured by heat may result from slow relaxation on cooling rather than thermodynamic instability and/or irreversible alterations of the polypeptide chain. Using this kinetic reversible two-state model, we estimated the effects of the scan rate and kinetic parameters of the macromolecule on its unfolding-refolding process. A few recommendations are suggested on how to reach maximal possible recovery after denaturation if refolding appears to be under kinetic control.  相似文献   

18.
Manyusa S  Mortuza G  Whitford D 《Biochemistry》1999,38(43):14352-14362
The guanidine hydrochloride- (GuHCl-) induced unfolding and refolding of a recombinant domain of bovine microsomal cytochrome b(5) containing the first 104 amino acid residues has been characterized by both transient and equilibrium spectrophotometric methods. The soluble domain is reversibly unfolded and the equilibrium reaction may be monitored by changes in absorbance and fluorescence that accompany denaturation of the native protein. Both probes reveal a single cooperative transition with a midpoint at 3 M GuHCl and lead to a value for the protein stability (DeltaG(uw)) of 26.5 kJ mol(-1). This stability is much higher than that reported for the corresponding form of the apoprotein (approximately 7 kJ mol(-1)). Transient changes in fluorescence and absorbance during protein unfolding exhibit biphasic profiles. A fast phase occupying approximately 30% of the total amplitude is observed at high denaturant concentrations and becomes the dominant process within the transition region. The rates associated with each process show a linear dependency on GuHCl concentration, and at zero denaturant concentration the unfolding rates (k(uw)) are 4.5 x 10(-5) s(-1) and 5.2 x 10(-6) s(-1) at 25 degrees C. The pattern of unfolding is not correlated with covalent heterogeneity, since a wide range of variants and site-directed mutants exhibit identical profiles, nor is the unfolding correlated with cis-trans Pro isomerization in the native state. In comparison with the apo form of cytochrome b(5), the kinetics of refolding and unfolding are more complex and exhibit very different transition states. The data support a model for unfolding in which heme-protein interactions give rise to two discernible rates of unfolding. From an analysis of the activation parameters associated with each process it is established that two structurally similar transition states differing by less than 5 kJ mol(-1) exist in the unfolding reaction. Protein refolding exhibits monophasic kinetics but with distinct curvature apparent in plots of ln k(obs) versus denaturant concentration. The data are interpreted in terms of alternative routes for protein folding in which a "fast track" leads to the rapid ordering of structure around Trp26 for refolding while a slower route requires additional reorganization around the hydrophobic core.  相似文献   

19.
S Manyusa  D Whitford 《Biochemistry》1999,38(29):9533-9540
The refolding and unfolding kinetics of a soluble domain of apocytochrome b5 extending from residue 1 to 104 have been characterized using stopped flow and equilibrium-based fluorescence methods. The isolated apoprotein unfolds reversibly in the presence of GuHCl. From cooperative unfolding curves, the conformational stability (Delta G(uw)), in the absence of denaturant, is estimated to be 11.6 +/- 1.5 kJ mol-1 at 10 degrees C. The stability of apocytochrome b5 is lower than that of the corresponding form of the holoprotein (Delta G approximately 25 kJ mol-1) and exhibits a transition midpoint at 1.6 M GuHCl. Kinetic studies support the concept of a two-state model with both unfolding and refolding rates showing an exponential dependence on denaturant concentration with no evidence of the formation of transient intermediates in either limb of the chevron plot. Apocytochrome b5 is therefore an example of a protein in which both kinetics and equilibria associated with folding are described by a two-state model. The values of mku and mkf obtained from kinetic analysis are an indication of a transition state (mku/meq of 0.29) that resembles the native form by retaining similar solvent accessibility and many of the noncovalent interactions found in the apoprotein. The changes in heat capacity support a transition state that resembles the apoprotein with a value for Delta Cpf of -3.6 kJ mol-1 K-1 estimated for the refolding reaction. From these measurements, a model of refolding that involves the rapid nucleation of hydrophobic residues around Trp26 is suggested as a major event in the formation of the native apoprotein.  相似文献   

20.
Life grows almost everywhere on earth, including in extreme environments and under harsh conditions. Organisms adapted to high temperatures are called thermophiles (growth temperature 45-75 degrees C) and hyperthermophiles (growth temperature >or= 80 degrees C). Proteins from such organisms usually show extreme thermal stability, despite having folded structures very similar to their mesostable counterparts. Here, we summarize the current data on thermodynamic and kinetic folding/unfolding behaviors of proteins from hyperthermophilic microorganisms. In contrast to thermostable proteins, rather few (i.e. less than 20) hyperthermostable proteins have been thoroughly characterized in terms of their in vitro folding processes and their thermodynamic stability profiles. Examples that will be discussed include co-chaperonin proteins, iron-sulfur-cluster proteins, and DNA-binding proteins from hyperthermophilic bacteria (i.e. Aquifex and Theromotoga) and archea (e.g. Pyrococcus, Thermococcus, Methanothermus and Sulfolobus). Despite the small set of studied systems, it is clear that super-slow protein unfolding is a dominant strategy to allow these proteins to function at extreme temperatures.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号