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1.
The studies of GroEL, almost exclusively, have been concerned with the function of the chaperonin under non-stress conditions, and little is known about the role of GroEL during heat shock. Being a heat shock protein, GroEL deserves to be studied under heat shock temperature. As a model for heat shock in vitro, we have investigated the interaction of GroEL with the enzyme rhodanese undergoing thermal unfolding at 43 degrees C. GroEL interacted strongly with the unfolding enzyme forming a binary complex. Active rhodanese (82%) could be recovered by releasing the enzyme from GroEL after the addition of several components, e.g. ATP and the co-chaperonin GroES. After evaluating the stability of the GroEL-rhodanese complex, as a function of the percentage of active rhodanese that could be released from GroEL with time, we found that the complex had a half-life of only one and half-hours at 43 degrees C; while, it remained stable at 25 degrees C for more than 2 weeks. Interestingly, the GroEL-rhodanese complex remained intact and only 13% of its ATPase activity was lost during its incubation at 43 degrees C. Further, rhodanese underwent a conformational change over time while it was bound to GroEL at 43 degrees C. Overall, our results indicated that the inability to recover active enzyme at 43 degrees C from the GroEL-rhodanese complex was not due to the disruption of the complex or aggregation of rhodanese, but rather to the partial loss of its ATPase activity and/or to the inability of rhodanese to be released from GroEL due to a conformational change.  相似文献   

2.
The initial steps of heat-induced inactivation and aggregation of the enzyme rhodanese have been studied and found to involve the early formation of modified but catalytically active conformations. These intermediates readily form active dimers or small oligomers, as evident from there being only a small increase in light scattering and an increase in fluorescence energy homotransfer from rhodanese labeled with fluorescein. These species are probably not the domain-unfolded form, as they show activity and increased protection of hydrophobic surfaces. Cross-linking with glutaraldehyde and fractionation by gel filtration show the predominant formation of dimer during heat incubation. Comparison between the rates of aggregate formation at 50 degrees C after preincubation at 25 or 40 degrees C gives evidence of product-precursor relationships, and it shows that these dimeric or small oligomeric species are the basis of the irreversible aggregation. The thermally induced species is recognized by and binds to the chaperonin GroEL. The unfoldase activity of GroEL subsequently unfolds rhodanese to produce an inactive conformation and forms a stable, reactivable complex. The release of 80% active rhodanese upon addition of GroES and ATP indicates that the thermal incubation induces an alteration in conformation, rather than any covalent modification, which would lead to formation of irreversibly inactive species. Once oligomeric species are formed from the intermediates, GroEL cannot recognize them. Based on these observations, a model is proposed for rhodanese aggregation that can explain the paradoxical effect in which rhodanese aggregation is reduced at higher protein concentration.  相似文献   

3.
Escherichia coli trigger factor (TF) and DnaK cooperate in the folding of newly synthesized proteins. The combined deletion of the TF-encoding tig gene and the dnaK gene causes protein aggregation and synthetic lethality at 30 degrees C. Here we show that the synthetic lethality of DeltatigDeltadnaK52 cells is abrogated either by growth below 30 degrees C or by overproduction of GroEL/GroES. At 23 degrees C DeltatigDeltadnaK52 cells were viable and showed only minor protein aggregation. Overproduction of GroEL/GroES, but not of other chaperones, restored growth of DeltatigDeltadnaK52 cells at 30 degrees C and suppressed protein aggregation including proteins >/=60 kDa, which normally require TF and DnaK for folding. GroEL/GroES thus influences the folding of proteins previously identified as DnaK/TF substrates.  相似文献   

4.
Escherichia coli trigger factor (TF) and DnaK cooperate in the folding of newly synthesized proteins. The combined deletion of the TF-encoding tig gene and the dnaK gene causes protein aggregation and synthetic lethality at 30 degrees C. Here we show that the synthetic lethality of deltatigdeltadnaK52 cells is abrogated either by growth below 30 degrees C or by overproduction of GroEL/GroES. At 23 degrees C deltatigdeltadnaK52 cells were viable and showed only minor protein aggregation. Overproduction of GroEL/GroES, but not of other chaperones, restored growth of deltatigdeltadnaK52 cells at 30 degrees C and suppressed protein aggregation including proteins >/= 60 kDa, which normally require TF and DnaK for folding. GroEL/GroES thus influences the folding of proteins previously identified as DnaK/TF substrates.  相似文献   

5.
An extramitochondrial acetyl-coenzyme-A hydrolase from rat liver is shown to be a cold-labile oligomeric enzyme that undergoes a reversible conformational transition between a dimeric and a tetrameric form in the presence of adenosine 5'-triphosphate or adenosine 5'-diphosphate at 25-37 degrees C, and between a dimeric and a monomeric form at low temperature. The enzymatically active dimer is fairly stable at 25-37 degrees C, but much less stable at low temperature, dissociating into monomer with no activity. At 37 degrees C and low concentrations of enzyme protein (less than or equal to 14 micrograms/ml), the activity decreased rapidly and only 10% of the initial activity remaining after 60 min. Addition of bovine serum albumin or immunoglobulin G to the medium completely prevented inactivation of the dimeric enzyme at low concentration at 37 degrees C, but had little effect on cold inactivation of the enzyme. Cold inactivation of the dimeric enzyme was partially prevented by the presence of various CoA derivatives. The order of potency was acetyl-CoA (substrate) greater than or equal to butyryl-CoA greater than octanoyl-CoA greater than CoA (product) greater than acetoacetyl-CoA. Another enzyme product, acetate, had little effect on cold inactivation. Polyols, such as sucrose, glycerol, and ethylene glycol, and high concentrations of NaCl, KCl, pyrophosphate and phosphate also greatly prevented cold inactivation. Cold inactivation was scarcely affected by pH within the pH range at which the enzyme was stable at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

6.
Mendoza JA  Dulin P  Warren T 《Cryobiology》2000,41(4):319-323
The chaperonins GroEL and GroES were shown to facilitate the refolding of urea-unfolded rhodanese in an ATP-dependent process at 25 or 37 degrees C. A diminished chaperonin activity was observed at 10 degrees C, however. At low temperature, GroEL retains its ability to form a complex with urea-unfolded rhodanese or with GroES. GroEL is also able to bind ATP at 10 degrees C. Interestingly, the ATPase activity of GroEL was highly decreased at low temperatures. Hydrolysis of ATP by GroEL was 60% less at 10 degrees C than at 25 degrees C. We conclude that the reduced hydrolysis of ATP by GroEL is a major but perhaps not the only factor responsible for the diminished chaperonin activity at 10 degrees C. GroEL may function primarily at higher temperatures in which the ability of GroEL to hydrolyze ATP is not compromised.  相似文献   

7.
A monomeric form of acetylcholinesterase from the venom of Bungarus fasciatus is converted to a partially unfolded molten globule species by thermal inactivation, and subsequently aggregates rapidly. To separate the kinetics of unfolding from those of aggregation, single molecules of the monomeric enzyme were encapsulated in reverse micelles of Brij 30 in 2,2,4-trimethylpentane, or in large unilamellar vesicles of egg lecithin/cholesterol at various protein/micelle (vesicle) ratios. The first-order rate constant for thermal inactivation at 45 degrees C, of single molecules entrapped within the reverse micelles (0.031 min(-1)), was higher than in aqueous solution (0.007 min(-1)) or in the presence of normal micelles (0.020 min(-1)). This clearly shows that aggregation does not provide the driving force for thermal inactivation of BfAChE. Within the large unilamellar vesicles, at average protein/vesicle ratios of 1:1 and 10:1, the first-order rate constants for thermal inactivation of the encapsulated monomeric acetylcholinesterase, at 53 degrees C, were 0.317 and 0.342 min(-1), respectively. A crosslinking technique, utilizing the photosensitive probe, hypericin, showed that thermal denaturation produces a distribution of species ranging from dimers through to large aggregates. Consequently, at a protein/vesicle ratio of 10:1, aggregation can occur upon thermal denaturation. Thus, these experiments also demonstrate that aggregation does not drive the thermal unfolding of Bungarus fasciatus acetylcholinesterase. Our experimental approach also permitted monitoring of recovery of enzymic activity after thermal denaturation in the absence of a competing aggregation process. Whereas no detectable recovery of enzymic activity could be observed in aqueous solution, up to 23% activity could be obtained for enzyme sequestered in the reverse micelles.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of urea and several methylamine solutes on the catalytic stability and aggregation properties of rabbit muscle phosphofructokinase were assessed at physiologically realistic concentrations of the solutes under several pH and temperature regimes. The loss of catalytic activity observed under conditions of pH-induced cold lability was significantly reduced in the presence of trimethylamine-N-oxide, N-trimethylglycine and N-methylglycine (order of decreasing effectiveness). The concentration-dependent methylamine stabilization of the enzyme, seen with as little as 50 mM trimethylamine-N-oxide, was accompanied by increased aggregation of the enzyme to molecular weights greater than the tetramer (polytetramer) as solute concentration was raised to 400 mM. At pH 6.5-6.7 and 25 degrees C, concentrations of urea greater than 25 mM promoted a time-dependent inactivation of the enzyme which was enhanced at lower temperatures. The urea sensitivity of the enzyme exhibited with 0.8 M urea for 1 h at pH 8.0 did not result in measurable inactivation. The fluorescence emission wavelength maximum of the enzyme was shifted to longer wavelengths and the fluorescence intensity was increased as pH was lowered to 7.0, suggesting the occurrence of a protein conformation change as specific amino acid residues of the tetramer became protonated. Measurements of enzyme light scattering indicated that perturbation by urea was correlated with tetramer dissociation, which was irreversible by dialysis at 25 degrees C. The urea and methylamine influences on phosphofructokinase activity and structure were not counteracting. The synergistic interactions among pH, temperature, and solutes observed with phosphofructokinase are compared to effects on other associating-dissociating protein systems in order to evaluate possible mechanisms of action of these low molecular weight solutes.  相似文献   

9.
alpha-Glucosidase from yeast is inactivated rapidly at temperatures above 42 degrees C. The thermal inactivation is accompanied by aggregation. The molecular chaperone GroEL suppresses the formation of aggregates by binding the thermally inactivated alpha-glucosidase. Spectroscopic studies suggest that GroEL binds alpha-glucosidase in an intermediately folded state. The complex between alpha-glucosidase and GroEL can be dissolved by MgATP. GroES accelerates the MgATP-dependent dissociation of the alpha-glucosidase-GroEL complex. At elevated temperatures this release leads to the formation of aggregates, while at lower temperatures native, enzymatically active molecules are formed.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The in vitro folding of rhodanese involves a competition between formation of properly folded enzyme and off-pathway inactive species. Co-solvents like glycerol or low temperature, e.g. refolding at 10 degrees C, successfully retard the off-pathway formation of large inactive aggregates, but the process does not yield 100% active enzyme. These data suggest that mis-folded species are formed from early folding intermediates. GroEL can capture early folding intermediates, and it loses the ability to capture and reactivate rhodanese if the enzyme is allowed first to spontaneously fold for longer times before it is presented to GroEL, a process that leads to the formation of unproductive intermediates. In addition, GroEL cannot reverse large aggregates once they are formed, but it could capture some folding intermediates and activate them, even though they are not capable of forming active enzyme if left to spontaneous refolding. The interaction between GroEL and rhodanese substantially but not completely inhibits intra-protein inactivation, which is responsible for incomplete activation during unassisted refolding. Thus, GroEL not only decreases aggregation, but it gives the highest reactivation of any method of assistance. The results are interpreted using a previously suggested model based on studies of the spontaneous folding of rhodanese (Gorovits, B. M., McGee, W. A., and Horowitz, P. M. (1998) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1382, 120--128 and Panda, M., Gorovits, B. M., and Horowitz, P. M. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 63--70).  相似文献   

12.
alpha-Crystallin, a major eye lens protein, has been shown to function like a molecular chaperone by suppressing the aggregation of other proteins induced by various stress conditions. Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is known to cause structural and functional alterations in the lens macromolecules. Earlier we observed that exposure of rat lens to in vitro UV radiation led to inactivation of many lens enzymes including glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD). In the present paper, we show that alpha-crystallin (alphaA and alphaB) protects G6PD from UVB irradiation induced inactivation. While, at 25 degrees C, there was a time-dependent decrease in G6PD activity upon irradiation at 300 nm, at 40 degrees C there was a complete loss of activity within 30 min even without irradiation. The loss of activity of G6PD was prevented significantly, if alphaA- or alphaB-crystallin was present during irradiation. At 25 degrees C, alphaB-crystallin was slightly a better chaperone in protecting G6PD against UVB inactivation. Interestingly, at 40 degrees C, alphaA- and alphaB-crystallins not only prevent the loss of G6PD activity but also protect against UVB inactivation. However, alphaA- and alphaB-crystallins were equally efficient at 40 degrees C in protecting G6PD.  相似文献   

13.
The irreversible thermal inactivation of the sugarcane leaf NADP(+)-malic enzyme was studied at 50 degrees C and pH 7.0 and 8.0. Depending on the preincubation conditions, thermal inactivation followed mono- or biphasic first-order kinetics. A two-step behavior in the irreversible denaturation process was found when protein concentration was sufficiently low. The protein concentration necessary to obtain monlphasic thermal inactivation kinetics was lower at pH 8.0 than at pH 7.0. The results suggest that biphasic inactivation kinetics are the consequence of the existence of two different oligomeric forms of the enzyme (dimer and tetramer), with the dimer being more stable in regards to thermal inactivation. The effects of the substrate and essential cofactors on the thermostability and equilibrium between the dimeric and tetrameric enzyme forms were also studied. Depending on the pH, NADP+, L-malate, and Mg2+ all had a protective effect on the stability of the dimeric and tetrameric species during thermal treatment. However, these ligands showed different effects on the aggregation state of the enzyme. NADP+ and L-malate induced dissociation, especially at pH 8.0, whereas Mg2+ induced aggregation of the protein. By studying the thermal inactivation kinetics at 50 degrees C and different pH values it was observed that the equilibrium between dimers and tetramers was dramatically affected in the range of pH 7.0-8.0. These results suggest that an amino acid residue(s) in the protein with an apparent pKa value of 7.7 needs to be deprotonated to stabilize aggregation of the enzyme to the tetrameric form.  相似文献   

14.
Thermal inactivation of glucose oxidase (GOD; beta-d-glucose: oxygen oxidoreductase), from Aspergillus niger, followed first order kinetics both in the absence and presence of additives. Additives such as lysozyme, NaCl, and K2SO4 increased the half-life of the enzyme by 3.5-, 33.4-, and 23.7-fold respectively, from its initial value at 60 degrees C. The activation energy increased from 60.3 kcal mol-1 to 72.9, 76.1, and 88.3 kcal mol-1, whereas the entropy of activation increased from 104 to 141, 147, and 184 cal x mol-1 x deg-1 in the presence of 7.1 x 10-5 m lysozyme, 1 m NaCl, and 0.2 m K2SO4, respectively. The thermal unfolding of GOD in the temperature range of 25-90 degrees C was studied using circular dichroism measurements at 222, 274, and 375 nm. Size exclusion chromatography was employed to follow the state of association of enzyme and dissociation of FAD from GOD. The midpoint for thermal inactivation of residual activity and the dissociation of FAD was 59 degrees C, whereas the corresponding midpoint for loss of secondary and tertiary structure was 62 degrees C. Dissociation of FAD from the holoenzyme was responsible for the thermal inactivation of GOD. The irreversible nature of inactivation was caused by a change in the state of association of apoenzyme. The dissociation of FAD resulted in the loss of secondary and tertiary structure, leading to the unfolding and nonspecific aggregation of the enzyme molecule because of hydrophobic interactions of side chains. This confirmed the critical role of FAD in structure and activity. Cysteine oxidation did not contribute to the nonspecific aggregation. The stabilization of enzyme by NaCl and lysozyme was primarily the result of charge neutralization. K2SO4 enhanced the thermal stability by primarily strengthening the hydrophobic interactions and made the holoenzyme a more compact dimeric structure.  相似文献   

15.
The critical role played by temperature in ligand-induced protein aggregation was investigated. Recombinant human interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (rhIL-1ra) and the ligands benzyl alcohol and 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate (ANS) were used. We investigated aggregation kinetics and the conformation and cysteine reactivity of rhIL-1ra in buffer alone or in the presence of 0.9% (w/v) benzyl alcohol or 4.2 or 21 mM ANS at 25 and 37 degrees C. In buffer, protein aggregation was not detected at 25 degrees C but occurred at 37 degrees C. At 25 degrees C, neither benzyl alcohol nor 4.2 mM ANS enhanced aggregation. However, at 37 degrees C, both compounds greatly accelerated protein aggregation. With 21 mM ANS, rhIL-1ra aggregation was accelerated at both temperatures, but the effect was more pronounced at 37 degrees C than at 25 degrees C. Increasing the temperature from 25 to 37 degrees C caused a minor perturbation in the tertiary structure of rhIL-1ra in buffer but no detectable alteration in secondary structure. Benzyl alcohol enhanced the tertiary structural perturbation at 37 degrees C, but the secondary structure was not affected by the ligand. The reactivity of buried free cysteines of rhIL-1ra was enhanced by benzyl alcohol at 37 degrees C but not at 25 degrees C, consistent with the structural results. Isothermal titration calorimetry documented that the interaction of benzyl alcohol with rhIL-1ra was hydrophobic and that the degree of hydrophobic interactions increased with temperature. At 25 degrees C, the interaction of ANS with rhIL-1ra was electrostatic, but at 37 degrees C, both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions were important. Taken together, our results support the conclusion that benzyl alcohol and ANS interact hydrophobically with partially unfolded aggregation-prone protein molecules, resulting in temperature-dependent increases in their levels and acceleration of protein aggregation.  相似文献   

16.
It is known that denaturation of D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH, EC 1.2.1.12) in low concentrations of GuHCl, around 0.5 M, at 25 degrees C, leads first to a burst phase drop of activity, followed by slow unfolding with further loss of enzyme activity and aggregation. However, GAPDH at higher concentrations does not increase the aggregation in the slow phase as would be expected but decreases both the inactivation and aggregation of the enzyme instead. It seems that GAPDH at high concentrations protects the enzyme against GuHCl-denaturation. This protection is not a general effect of GuHCl binding by increased protein concentration but specific for GAPDH, as either bovine serum albumin or alpha-lactalbumin does not show any protection at similar concentrations. It is proposed that dissociation of tetrameric GAPDH into dimers in the early phase of denaturation in dilute GuHCl is reversible and further unfolding of the dimer to an aggregation prone species is irreversible and rate-limiting for the unfolding process. High concentrations of the enzyme shift the equilibrium towards the tetramer thus decrease the aggregation of GAPDH in dilute GuHCl.  相似文献   

17.
Escherichia coli cells that produce only plasmid-encoded wild-type or mutant GroEL were generated by bacteriophage P1 transduction. Effects of mutations that affect the allosteric properties of GroEL were characterized in vivo. Cells containing only GroEL(R197A), which has reduced intra-ring positive cooperativity and inter-ring negative cooperativity in ATP binding, grow poorly upon a temperature shift from 25 to 42 degrees C. This strain supports the growth of phages T4 and T5 but not phage lambda and produces light at 28 degrees C when transformed with a second plasmid containing the lux operon. In contrast, cells containing only GroEL(R13G, A126V) which lacks negative cooperativity between rings but has intact intra-ring positive cooperativity grow normally and support phage growth but do not produce light at 28 degrees C. In vitro refolding of luciferase in the presence of this mutant is found to be less efficient compared with wild-type GroEL or other mutants tested. Our results show that allostery in GroEL is important in vivo in a manner that depends on the physiological conditions and is protein substrate specific.  相似文献   

18.
A temperature-dependent conformational change of the active DPN-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase was observed. When initial reaction kinetic data were examined between 35 and 5 degrees, the Hill number (n) varied from 2 at higher to n approaching unity at lower temperatures, with an inflection point at 17 degrees. The presence of manganous isocitrate in the incubation media shifted the transition temperature for enzyme inactivation by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) from 8-16 degrees. These temperature-dependent transitions were paralleled by progressive changes in sedimentation velocities from s20, w of 10.4 at 25 degrees to 7.3 at 10 degrees as measured by active band centrifugation. The linear Arrhenius plot for apparent V max and the constancy of S0.5 for the substrate manganous isocitrate between 35 and 5 degrees suggest that this temperature-dependent conformational change may not be solely related to manganous isocitrate. Further indications of equilibria between different species of enzyme in solution and effects of substrates and cofactors on conformation came from studies of specific activity of enzyme diluted into buffers at 3 and 25 degrees. Dilution to concentrations between 10 and 25 mum enzyme resulted in relatively rapid protein concentration-dependent inactivation which could be prevented and fully reversed by manganous isocitrate. No further substantial inactivation was found subsequent to this phase at 25 degrees. Lowering the temperature of the dilution buffer to 3 degrees favored formation of enzyme species exhibiting a further time and pH-dependent loss of activity which became independent of protein concentration below 7 mum enzyme. The rate of cold inactivation was reduced by raising the ionic strength of the buffer and its progress could be arrested by manganous isocitrate; however, the substrate did not restore the original activity.  相似文献   

19.
Guanidine x HCl (GdnHCl)-induced unfolding of tetrameric N(5)-(L-1-carboxyethyl)-L-ornithine synthase (CEOS; 141,300 M(r)) from Lactococcus lactis at pH 7.2 and 25 degrees C occurred in several phases. The enzyme was inactivated at approximately 1 M GdnHCl. A time-, temperature-, and concentration-dependent formation of soluble protein aggregates occurred at 0.5-1.5 M GdnHCl due to an increased exposure of apolar surfaces. A transition from tetramer to unfolded monomer was observed between 2 and 3.5 M GdnHCl (without observable dimer or trimer intermediates), as evidenced by tyrosyl and tryptophanyl fluorescence changes, sulfhydryl group exposure, loss of secondary structure, size-exclusion chromatography, and sedimentation equilibrium data. GdnHCl-induced dissociation and unfolding of tetrameric CEOS was concerted, and yields of reactivated CEOS by dilution from 5 M GdnHCl were improved when unfolding took place on ice rather than at 25 degrees C. Refolding and reconstitution of the enzyme were optimal at 相似文献   

20.
We used preS2-S'-beta-galactosidase, a three-domain fusion protein that aggregates extensively at 43 degrees C in the cytoplasm of Escherichia coli, to search for multicopy suppressors of protein aggregation and inclusion body formation and took advantage of the known differential solubility of preS2-S'-beta-galactosidase at 37 and 43 degrees C to develop a selection procedure for the gene products that would prevent its aggregation in vivo at 43 degrees C. First, we demonstrate that the differential solubility of preS2-S'-beta-galactosidase results in a lactose-positive phenotype at 37 degrees C as opposed to a lactose-negative phenotype at 43 degrees C. We searched for multicopy suppressors of preS2-S'-beta-galactosidase aggregation by selecting pink lactose-positive colonies on a background of white lactose-negative colonies at 43 degrees C after transformation of bacteria with an E. coli gene bank. We discovered that protein isoaspartate methyltransferase (PIMT) is a multicopy suppressor of preS2-S'-beta-galactosidase aggregation at 43 degrees C. Overexpression of PIMT reduces the amount of preS2-S'-beta-galactosidase found in inclusion bodies at 43 degrees C and increases its amount in soluble fractions. It reduces the level of isoaspartate formation in preS2-S'-beta-galactosidase and increases its thermal stability in E. coli crude extracts without increasing the thermostability of a control protein, citrate synthase, in the same extracts. We could not detect any induction of the heat shock response resulting from PIMT overexpression, as judged from amounts of DnaK and GroEL, which were similar in the PIMT-overproducing and control strains. These results suggest that PIMT might be overburdened in some physiological conditions and that its overproduction may be beneficial in conditions in which protein aggregation occurs, for example, during biotechnological protein overproduction or in protein aggregation diseases.  相似文献   

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