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1.
L N Lin  J F Brandts 《Biochemistry》1987,26(7):1826-1830
Experiments have been carried out on ribonuclease A in which refolding in high concentrations of guanidine hydrochloride is either preceded or not preceded by a short ammonium sulfate pulse. Application of the pulse causes the rapid formation of the nativelike intermediate, and the effect of this pulse was determined by using three different methods for monitoring the subsequent refolding reaction: direct absorbance, direct fluorescence, and a double-jump fluorescence unfolding assay which is specific for the isomerization of proline-93. The effect of the pulse is quite different depending on the method of detection. With absorbance detection, the pulse causes a large reduction in the refolding amplitude with no change in the kinetics of the decay curve, while with the fluorescence unfolding assay, the pulse causes no change in the refolding amplitude but produces a large acceleration in the decay kinetics. The results with direct fluorescence are intermediate with some reduction seen in the refolding amplitude and some acceleration in the decay kinetics. The results of these experiments are simulated by using the simple model of Lin and Brandts (1984) [Lin, L.-N., & Brandts, J. F. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 5713] in which proline-93 must be in the correct cis configuration before folding to the native or nativelike state can occur. In all cases, the simulations accurately predict the experimental results for all three methods of detection, without any adjustment of parameter values from those published earlier.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The folding reaction of Anabaena apoflavodoxin has been studied by stopped-flow kinetics and site-directed mutagenesis. Although the urea unfolding equilibrium is two-state, a transient intermediate accumulates during the folding reaction. The intermediate is monomeric, and it is not related to proline isomerization. Unlike many cases where the presence of an intermediate has been detected either by a burst phase or by the curvature, at low urea concentration, of the otherwise only observable kinetic phase, two kinetic phases are observed in apoflavodoxin folding whose total amplitude equals the amplitude of unfolding. To determine the role of the intermediate in the folding reaction, the apoflavodoxin kinetic data have been fitted to all conceivable three-species kinetic models (either linear or triangular). Using a stepwise fitting procedure, we find that the off-pathway mechanism explains most of the kinetic data (not a slow unfolding phase), the on-pathway mechanism being rejected. By using global analysis, good overall agreement between data and fit is found when a triangular mechanism is considered. The fitted values of the microscopic constants indicate that most of the unfolded molecules refold from the denatured state. Apoflavodoxin thus folds via a triangular, but essentially off-pathway, mechanism. We calculate that the retardation of the folding caused by the off-pathway intermediate is not large. Some unusual properties of the intermediate are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Previous studies on the refolding of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli assigned two slow refolding phases to rate-limiting isomerizations of two 'essential' proline residues, one in each of the two domains of the protein (Matthews, C.R., Crisanti, M.M., Manz, J.T. and Gepner, G.L. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 1445-1452). The double-jump experiment (Brandts, J.F., Halvorson, H.R. and Brennan, M. (1975) Biochemistry 14, 4953-4963) was used to further investigate this phenomenon. The reaction assigned to the carboxyl domain is consistent with the proline isomerization hypothesis. The amino domain process is more rapid than expected for proline isomerization and may reflect another type of slow folding reaction. The results permit a further refinement of the folding model for the alpha subunit and demonstrate the existence of a third unfolded species whose folding is not limited by either of these two reactions.  相似文献   

4.
Folding of tendamistat is a rapid two-state process for the majority of the unfolded molecules. In fluorescence-monitored refolding kinetics about 8% of the unfolded molecules fold slowly (lambda=0.083s(-1)), limited by peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerization. This is significantly less than expected from the presence of three trans prolyl-peptide bonds in the native state. In interrupted refolding experiments we detected an additional very slow folding reaction (lambda=0.008s(-1) at pH 2) with an amplitude of about 12%. This reaction is caused by the interconversion of a highly structured intermediate to native tendamistat. The intermediate has essentially native spectroscopic properties and about 2% of it remain populated in equilibrium after folding is complete. Catalysis by human cyclophilin 18 identifies this very slow reaction as a prolyl isomerization reaction. This shows that prolyl-isomerases are able to efficiently catalyze native state isomerization reactions, which allows them to influence biologically important regulatory conformational transitions. Folding kinetics of the proline variants P7A, P9A, P50A and P7A/P9A show that the very slow reaction is due to isomerization of the Glu6-Pro7 and Ala8-Pro9 peptide bonds, which are located in a region that makes strong backbone and side-chain interactions to both beta-sheets. In the P50A variant the very slow isomerization reaction is still present but native state heterogeneity is not observed any more, indicating a long-range destabilizing effect on the alternative native state relative to N. These results enable us to include all prolyl and non-prolyl peptide bond isomerization reactions in the folding mechanism of tendamistat and to characterize the kinetic mechanism and the energetics of a native-state prolyl isomerization reaction.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetics of unfolding and refolding of porcine ribonuclease were investigated. The unfolded state of this protein was found to consist of a fast-refolding species (UF) and two slow-refolding species (UIS and UIIS). After the rapid collapse of the structure during the N (native)----UF unfolding reaction, UIS and UIIS are produced from UF by two independent slow isomerizations of the unfolded polypeptide chain, leading ultimately to a mixture of about 10% UF, 20% UIIS and 70% UIS molecules at equilibrium. This is at variance with all other ribonucleases investigated to date, which show a distribution of 20% UF, 60 to 70% UIIS and only 10 to 20% UIS. The two isomerizations of the unfolded porcine protein differ strongly in rate. The first process with tau = 250 seconds (10 degrees C) leads to an increase in the fluorescence of Tyr92 and was identified as cis in equilibrium trans isomerization of Pro93. At equilibrium, most unfolded molecules contain an incorrect trans Pro93. The second isomerization is much slower (tau = 1300 s at 10 degrees C) and leads to a predominance of the incorrect isomer as well. Like isomerization of Pro93, it is governed by an activation enthalpy of 22 kcal/mol (92 kJ/mol) and it was tentatively assigned to the Pro114-Pro115 sequence of porcine ribonuclease. Because of the wide separation in rate between the two reactions, molecules with an incorrect isomer only at Pro93 accumulate transiently after unfolding. These are the UIIS molecules. Most of them are finally converted to UIS by the 1300 second process. All molecules that have undergone this isomerization refold very slowly, i.e. the UIS molecules. The major fraction contains two incorrect isomers. A 1300 second isomerization after unfolding and a predominant very slow refolding reaction were observed only for the porcine protein. We suggest that these changes in the folding mechanism may be correlated with the presence of the Pro114-Pro115 sequence, which occurs only in porcine ribonuclease. The refolding pathway of porcine UIIS involves the rapid formation of a native-like intermediate with an incorrect trans Pro93 as was found previously for the bovine ribonuclease, where the UIIS species predominates in the unfolded state.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The refolding of ribonuclease T1 is dominated by two major slow kinetic phases that show properties of proline isomerization reactions. We report here that the molecular origin of one of these processes is the trans----cis isomerization of the Ser54-Pro55 peptide bond, which is cis in the native protein but predominantly trans in unfolded ribonuclease T1. This is shown by a comparison of the wild type and a designed mutant protein where Ser54 and Pro55 were replaced by Gly54 and Asn55, respectively. This mutation leaves the thermal stability of the protein almost unchanged; however, in the absence of Pro55 one of the two slow phases in folding is abolished and the kinetic mechanism of refolding is dramatically simplified.  相似文献   

8.
pH dependence of folding of iso-2-cytochrome c   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
B T Nall  J J Osterhout  L Ramdas 《Biochemistry》1988,27(19):7310-7314
Starting from a standard unfolded state (3.0 M guanidine hydrochloride, pH 7.2), the kinetics of refolding of iso-2-cytochrome c have been investigated as a function of final pH between pH 3 and pH 10. Absorbance in the ultraviolet and visible spectral regions and tryptophan fluorescence are used to monitor folding. Over most of the pH range, fast and slow folding phases are detected by both fluorescence and absorbance probes. Near neutral pH, the rate of fast folding appears to be the same when monitored by absorbance and fluorescence probes. At higher and lower pH, there are two fast folding reactions, with absorbance-detected fast folding occurring in a slightly faster time range than fluorescence-detected fast folding. The rates of both fast folding reactions pass through broad minima near neutral pH, indicating involvement of ionizable groups in rate-limiting steps. The rates of slow folding also depend on the final pH. At acid pH, there appears to be a single slow folding phase for both fluorescence and absorbance probes. At neutral pH, the absorbance-detected and fluorescence-detected slow folding phases separate into distinct kinetic processes which differ in rate and relative amplitude. At high pH, absorbance-detected slow folding is no longer observed, while fluorescence-detected slow folding is decreased in amplitude. In contrast, the equilibrium and kinetic properties of proline imide bond isomerization, believed to be involved in the slow folding reactions, are largely independent of pH. The results suggest that the pH dependence of slow folding involves coupling of pH-sensitive structure to proline imide bond isomerization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The folding kinetics of the catalytic domain of Bacillus subtilis ribonuclease P is analyzed here by fluorescence and catalytic activity. The folding pathway is apparently free of kinetic traps, as indicated by a decrease in folding rates upon the addition of urea. We apply Mg2+ and urea chevron analysis to fully describe the folding and unfolding kinetics of this ribozyme. A folding scheme containing two kinetic intermediates completely accounts for the free energy, the Mg2+ Hill coefficient and the surface buried in the equilibrium transition. At saturating Mg 2+concentrations, folding is limited by a barrier that is independent of Mg2+ and urea. These results describe the first trap-free folding pathway of a large ribozyme and indicate that kinetic traps are not an obligate feature of RNA folding.  相似文献   

10.
Kim DH  Jang DS  Nam GH  Yun S  Cho JH  Choi G  Lee HC  Choi KY 《Biochemistry》2000,39(42):13084-13092
Equilibrium and kinetic analyses have been carried out to elucidate the folding mechanism of homodimeric ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) from Comamonas testosteroni. The folding of KSI was reversible since the activity as well as the fluorescence and CD spectra was almost completely recovered after refolding. The equilibrium unfolding transitions monitored by fluorescence and CD measurements were almost coincident with each other, and the transition midpoint increased with increasing protein concentration. This suggests that the KSI folding follows a simple two-state mechanism consisting of native dimer and unfolded monomer without any thermodynamically stable intermediates. Sedimentation equilibrium analysis and size-exclusion chromatography of KSI at different urea concentrations supported the two-state model without any evidence of folded monomeric intermediates. Consistent with the two-state model, (1)H-(15)N HSQC spectra obtained for KSI in the unfolding transition region could be reproduced by a simple addition of the spectra of the native and the unfolded KSI. The KSI refolding kinetics as monitored by fluorescence intensity could be described as a fast first-order process followed by a second-order and a subsequent slow first-order processes with rate constants of 60 s(-)(1), 5.4 x 10(4) M(-)(1).s(-)(1), and 0.017 s(-)(1), respectively, at 0.62 M urea, suggesting that there may be a monomeric folding intermediate. After a burst phase that accounts for >83% of the total amplitude, the negative molar ellipticity at 225 nm increased slowly in a single phase at a rate comparable to that of the bimolecular intermediate step. The kinetics of activity recovery from the denatured state were markedly dependent upon the protein concentration, implying that the monomers are not fully active. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the dimerization induces KSI to fold into the complete structure and is crucial for maintaining the tertiary structure to perform efficient catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
The nature of protein folding pathways: The classical versus the new view   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Summary Pulsed hydrogen exchange and other studies of the kinetic refolding pathways of several small proteins have established that folding intermediates with native-like secondary structures are well populated, but these studies have also shown that the folding kinetics are not well synchronized. Older studies of the kinetics of formation of the native protein, monitored by optical probes, indicate that the folding kinetics should be synchronized. The model commonly used in these studies is the simple sequential model, which postulates a unique folding pathway with defined and sequential intermediates. Theories of the folding process and Monte Carlo simulations of folding suggest that neither the folding pathway nor the set of folding intermediates is unique, and that folding intermediates accumulate because of kinetic traps caused by partial misfolding. Recent experiments with cytochrome c lend support to this new view of folding pathways. These different views of the folding process are discussed. Misfolding and consequent slowing down of the folding process as a result of cis-trans isomerization about prolyl peptide bonds in the unfolded protein are well known; isomerization occurs before refolding is initiated. The occurrence of equilibrium intermediates on the kinetic folding pathways of some proteins, such as -lactalbumin and apomyoglobin, argues that these intermediates are not caused by kinetic traps but rather are stable intermediates under certain conditions, and this conclusion is consistent with a sequential model of folding. Folding reactions with successive kinetic intermediates, in which late intermediates are more highly folded than early intermediates, indicate that folding is hierarchical. New experiments that test the predictions of the classical and the new views are needed.  相似文献   

12.
P19(INK4d) is a tumor suppressing protein and belongs to a family of cyclin D-dependent kinase inhibitors of CDK4 and CDK6, which play a key role in human cell cycle control. P19 comprises ten alpha-helices arranged sequentially in five ankyrin repeats forming an elongated structure. This rather simple topology, combined with its physiological function, makes p19 an interesting model protein for folding studies. Urea-induced unfolding transitions monitored by far-UV CD and phenylalanine fluorescence coincide and suggest a two-state mechanism for equilibrium unfolding. Unfolding of p19 followed by 2D (1)H-(15)N HSQC spectra revealed a third species at moderate urea concentrations with a maximum population of about 30 % near 3.2 M urea. It shows poor chemical shift dispersion, but cross-peaks emerge for some residues that are distinct from the native or unfolded state. This equilibrium intermediate either arises only at high protein concentrations (as in the NMR experiment) or has similar optical properties to the unfolded state. Stopped-flow far-UV CD experiments at various urea concentrations revealed that alpha-helical structure is formed in three phases, of which only the fastest phase (10 s(-1)) depends upon the urea concentration. The kinetic of the slowest phase (0.017 s(-1)) can be resolved by 1D real-time NMR and accelerated by cyclophilin. It is limited in rate by prolyl isomerization, and native-like ordered structure cannot form prior to this isomerization. The two fast phases lead to 83 % native protein within the dead time of the NMR experiment. In contrast to p16(INK4a), which exhibits only a marginal stability and high unfolding rates, p19 shows the expected stability for a protein of this size with a clear kinetic barrier between the unfolded and folded state. Therefore, p19 might complement the function of less stable INK4 inhibitors in cell cycle control under unfavorable conditions.  相似文献   

13.
In this study, the equivalence of the kinetic mechanisms of the formation of urea-induced kinetic folding intermediates and non-native equilibrium states was investigated in apomyoglobin. Despite having similar structural properties, equilibrium and kinetic intermediates accumulate under different conditions and via different mechanisms, and it remains unknown whether their formation involves shared or distinct kinetic mechanisms. To investigate the potential mechanisms of formation, the refolding and unfolding kinetics of horse apomyoglobin were measured by continuous- and stopped-flow fluorescence over a time range from approximately 100 μs to 10 s, along with equilibrium unfolding transitions, as a function of urea concentration at pH 6.0 and 8°C. The formation of a kinetic intermediate was observed over a wider range of urea concentrations (0–2.2 M) than the formation of the native state (0–1.6 M). Additionally, the kinetic intermediate remained populated as the predominant equilibrium state under conditions where the native and unfolded states were unstable (at ~0.7–2 M urea). A continuous shift from the kinetic to the equilibrium intermediate was observed as urea concentrations increased from 0 M to ~2 M, which indicates that these states share a common kinetic folding mechanism. This finding supports the conclusion that these intermediates are equivalent. Our results in turn suggest that the regions of the protein that resist denaturant perturbations form during the earlier stages of folding, which further supports the structural equivalence of transient and equilibrium intermediates. An additional folding intermediate accumulated within ~140 μs of refolding and an unfolding intermediate accumulated in <1 ms of unfolding. Finally, by using quantitative modeling, we showed that a five-state sequential scheme appropriately describes the folding mechanism of horse apomyoglobin.  相似文献   

14.
Folding of tendamistat, an inhibitor of alpha-amylase, is a fast two-state process accompanied by two minor slow reactions, which were assigned to prolyl isomerization. In a proline-free variant, 5% of the molecules still fold slowly with a rate constant of 2.5 s(-1). This reaction is caused by a slow equilibrium between two populations of unfolded molecules. The time constant for this equilibration process, its sensitivity to LiCl and its temperature dependence identify it as a cis-trans isomerization of nonprolyl peptide bonds. Although nonprolyl peptide bonds have the cis conformation populating only approximately 0.15% in unfolded proteins, their large number generates a significant fraction of slow-folding molecules. This emphasizes that heterogeneous populations in an unfolded protein can induce complex folding kinetics on various time scales.  相似文献   

15.
Protein folding kinetic data have been obtained for the marginally stable N-terminal Src homology 3 domain of the Drosophila protein drk (drkN SH3) in an investigation of the hydrodynamic properties of its folding transition state. Due to the presence of NMR resonances of both folded and unfolded states at equilibrium, kinetic data can be derived from NMR magnetization transfer techniques under equilibrium conditions. Kinetic analysis as a function of urea (less than approximately 1 M) and glycerol enables determination of alpha values, measures of the energetic sensitivity of the transition state to the perturbation relative to the end states of the protein folding reaction (the folded and unfolded states). Both end states have previously been studied experimentally by NMR spectroscopic and other biophysical methods in great detail and under nondenaturing conditions. Combining these results with the kinetic folding data obtained here, we can characterize the folding transition state without requiring empirical models for the unfolded state structure. We are thus able to give a reliable measure of the solvent-accessible surface area of the transition state of the drkN SH3 domain (4730 +/- 360 A(2)) based on urea titration data. Glycerol titration data give similar results and additionally demonstrate that folding of this SH3 domain is dependent on solvent viscosity, which is indicative of at least partial hydration of the transition state. Because SH3 domains appear to fold by a common folding mechanism, the data presented here provide valuable insight into the transition states of the drkN and other SH3 domains.  相似文献   

16.
The slow refolding of guanidine-HCl-denatured ribonuclease-A was studied by volume change and by kinetic CD at 222 and 276 nm. Dilatometric measurements revealed that on refolding there is a fast volume change of +232 mL/mol of protein. This is followed by a very slow nonexponential change that takes about 25 min to reach equilibrium. By adding varying amounts of (NH4)2SO4, the slow volume change curve was resolved into 2 concurrent reactions. The faster of the 2 slow events entails a negative volume change of -64 mL/mol of protein and appears to arise from proline isomerization. The slower process, attended by a positive change of +53 mL/mol of protein, has properties consistent with the "XY" reaction of Lin and Brands (1983, Biochemistry 22:563-573). This reaction is so named because the conformational nature of neither its initial (Y) nor its final state (X) is known; the transition is characterized solely by its absorbance and fluorescence kinetics. These are the first direct physical measures attributable to the "XY" process. The early formation of a compact structure in the event responsible for the rapid +232-mL/mol volume change, however, is consistent with the sequential model of folding (Cook KH, Schmid FX, Baldwin RL, 1979, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 76:6157-6161; Kim PS, Baldwin RL, 1980, Biochemistry 19:6124-6129). The usefulness of volume change measurements as a method of detecting structural rearrangements was confirmed by finding agreement between time constants obtained from parallel volume change and kinetic CD experiments. The measured volume changes arise from both changes in hydration and changes in the packing of atoms in the interior of the protein.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The refolding kinetics of ribonuclease S have been measured by tyrosine absorbance, by tyrosine fluorescence emission, and by rapid binding of the specific inhibitor 2′CMP 2 to folded RNAase S. The S-protein is first unfolded at pH 1.7 and then either mixed with S-peptide as refolding is initiated by a stopped-flow pH jump to pH 6.8, or the same results are obtained if S-protein and S-peptide are present together before refolding is initiated. The refolding kinetics of RNAase S have been measured as a function of temperature (10 to 40 °C) and of protein concentration (10 to 120 μm). The results are compared to the folding kinetics of S-protein alone and to earlier studies of RNAase A. A thermal folding transition of S-protein has been found below 30 °C at pH 1.7; its effects on the refolding kinetics are described in the following paper (Labhardt &; Baldwin, 1979).In this paper we characterize the refolding kinetics of unfolded S-protein, as it is found above 30 °C at pH 1.7, together with the kinetics of combination between S-peptide and S-protein during folding at pH 6.8. Two classes of unfolded S-protein molecules are found, fast-folding and slow-folding molecules, in a 20: 80 ratio. This is the same result as that found earlier for RNAase A; it is expected if the slow-folding molecules are produced by the slow cis-trans isomerization of proline residues after unfolding, since S-protein contains all four proline residues of RNAase A.The refolding kinetics of the fast-folding molecules show clearly that combination between S-peptide and S-protein occurs before folding of S-protein is complete. If combination occurred only after complete folding, then the kinetics of formation of RNAase S should be rather slow (5 s and 100 s at 30 °C) and nearly independent of protein concentration, as shown by separate measurements of the folding kinetics of S-protein, and of the combination between S-peptide and folded S-protein. The observed folding kinetics are faster than predicted by this model and also the folding rate increases strongly with protein concentration (apparent 1.6 order kinetics). The fact that RNAase S is formed more rapidly than S-protein alone is sufficient by itself to show that combination with S-peptide precedes complete folding of S-protein. Computer simulation of a simple, parallel-pathway scheme is able to reproduce the folding kinetics of the fast-folding molecules. All three probes give the same folding kinetics.These results exclude the model for protein folding in which the rate-limiting step is an initial diffusion of the polypeptide chain into a restricted range of three-dimensional configurations (“nueleation”) followed by rapid folding (“propagation”). If this model were valid, one would expect comparable rates of folding for RNAase A and for S-protein and one would also expect to find no populated folding intermediates, so that combination between S-peptide and S-protein should occur after folding is complete. Instead, RNAase A folds 60 times more rapidly than S-protein and also combination with S-peptide occurs before folding of S-protein is complete. The results demonstrate that the folding rate of S-protein increases after the formation, or stabilization, of an intermediate which results from combination with S-peptide. They support a sequential model for protein folding in which the rates of successive steps in folding depend on the stabilities of preceding intermediates.The refolding kinetics of the slow-folding molecules are complex. Two results demonstrate the presence of folding intermediates: (1) the three probes show different kinetic progress curves, and (2) the folding kinetics are concentration-dependent, in contrast to the results expected if complete folding of S-protein precedes combination with S-peptide. A faster phase of the slow-refolding reaction is detected both by tyrosine absorbance and fluorescence emission but not by 2′CMP binding, indicating that native RNAase S is not formed in this phase. Comparison of the kinetic progress curves measured by different probes is made with the use of the kinetic ratio test, which is defined here.  相似文献   

19.
T Kiefhaber  R Quaas  U Hahn  F X Schmid 《Biochemistry》1990,29(12):3053-3061
It is our aim to elucidate molecular aspects of the mechanism of protein folding. We use ribonuclease T1 as a model protein, because it is a small single-domain protein with a well-defined secondary and tertiary structure, which is stable in the presence and absence of disulfide bonds. Also, an efficient mutagenesis system is available to produce protein molecules with defined sequence variations. Here we present a preliminary characterization of the folding kinetics of ribonuclease T1. Its unfolding and refolding reactions are reversible, which is shown by the quantitative recovery of the catalytic activity after an unfolding/refolding cycle. Refolding is a complex process, where native protein is formed on three distinguishable pathways. There are 3.5% fast-folding molecules, which refold within the millisecond time range, and 96.5% slow-folding species, which regain the native state in the time range of minutes to hours. These slow-folding molecules give rise to two major, parallel refolding reactions. The mixture of fast- and slow-folding molecules is produced slowly after unfolding by chain equilibration reactions that show properties of proline isomerization. We conclude that part of the kinetic complexity of RNase T1 folding can be explained on the basis of the proline model for protein folding. This is supported by the finding that the slow refolding reactions of this protein are accelerated in the presence of the enzyme prolyl isomerase. However, several properties of ribonuclease T1 refolding, such as the dependence of the relative amplitudes on the probes, used to follow folding, are not readily explained by a simple proline model.  相似文献   

20.
Equilibrium unfolding experiments on several mutant forms of horse heart cytochrome c were performed. By means of absorbance spectroscopy, the accumulation of an equilibrium intermediate was revealed upon unfolding of Y97V mutant protein, and its structural properties were characterized. The data obtained allow one to conclude that the equilibrium intermediate corresponds to the earliest kinetic intermediate Ic in cytochrome c folding reaction. A comparative analysis of spectral properties of unfolded states of cytochrome c induced by urea or guanidine hydrochloride is presented.  相似文献   

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