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1.
Mannosylglycerate is a compatible solute typical of thermophilic marine microorganisms that has a remarkable ability to protect proteins from thermal denaturation. This ionic solute appears to be a universal stabilizing agent, but the extent of protection depends on the specific protein examined. To understand how mannosylglycerate confers protection, we have been studying its influence on the internal motions of a hyperstable staphylococcal nuclease (SNase). Previously, we found a correlation between the magnitude of protein stabilization and the restriction of fast backbone motions. We now report the effect of mannosylglycerate on the fast motions of side-chains and on the slower unfolding motions of the protein. Side-chain motions were assessed by (13)CH(3) relaxation measurements and model-free analysis while slower unfolding motions were probed by H/D exchange measurements at increasing concentrations of urea. Side-chain motions were little affected by the presence of different concentrations of mannosylglycerate or even by the presence of urea (0.25M), and show no correlation with changes in the thermodynamic stability of SNase. Native hydrogen exchange experiments showed that, contrary to reports on other stabilizing solutes, mannosylglycerate restricts local motions in addition to the global motions of the protein. The protein unfolding/folding pathway remained undisturbed in the presence of mannosylglycerate but the solute showed a specific effect on the local motions of β-sheet residues. This work reinforces the link between solute-induced stabilization and restriction of protein motions at different timescales, and shows that the solute preferentially affects specific structural elements of SNase.  相似文献   

2.
The unfolding of cutinase at pH 4.5 was induced by increasing the temperature and guanidine hydrochloride concentration in the presence of potassium chloride, trehalose, and mannosylglycerate potassium salt. Protein thermal unfolding approached a two-state process, since the unfolding transitions were coincident within experimental error when assessed by near-ultraviolet (UV) difference, tryptophyl, and 8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonic acid (ANS) fluorescence spectroscopy. Trehalose at 0.5 M increased the temperature at which 50% of cutinase is unfolded by 3 degrees C. Unfolding induced by guanidine hydrochloride is clearly a non-two-state process. The presence of a stable intermediate was detected because unfolding assessed by near-UV difference spectroscopy occurs earlier than unfolding assessed by tryptophyl fluorescence. The intermediate is molten globule in character: the ANS fluorescence is higher than in the presence of the folded or unfolded state, showing native-like secondary structure and losing many tertiary interactions of the folded state, i.e., those surrounding the tyrosyl microenvironment. The stabilization effect of trehalose and mannosylglycerate was quantified by fitting the unfolding transitions to a model proposed by Staniforth et al. (Biochemistry 1993;32:3842-3851). This model takes into consideration the increase in solvation energies of the amino acid side-chains as the denaturant concentration was increased and the fraction of amino acid side-chains that become exposed in the unfolded structure of cutinase. Trehalose and mannosylglycerate stabilize the folded state relative to the intermediate by 1.4-1.6 and 1.6 kcal/mol and the intermediate relative to the unfolded state by 1.0 and 1.5 kcal/mol, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
The photophysics of the single tyrosine in bovine ubiquitin (UBQ) was studied by picosecond time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, as a function of pH and along thermal and chemical unfolding, with the following results: First, at room temperature (25 degrees C) and below pH 1.5, native UBQ shows single-exponential decays. From pH 2 to 7, triple-exponential decays were observed and the three decay times were attributed to the presence of tyrosine, a tyrosine-carboxylate hydrogen-bonded complex, and excited-state tyrosinate. Second, at pH 1.5, the water-exposed tyrosine of either thermally or chemically unfolded UBQ decays as a sum of two exponentials. The double-exponential decays were interpreted and analyzed in terms of excited-state intramolecular electron transfer from the phenol to the amide moiety, occurring in one of the three rotamers of tyrosine in UBQ. The values of the rate constants indicate the presence of different unfolded states and an increase in the mobility of the tyrosine residue during unfolding. Finally, from the pre-exponential coefficients of the fluorescence decays, the unfolding equilibrium constants (KU) were calculated, as a function of temperature or denaturant concentration. Despite the presence of different unfolded states, both thermal and chemical unfolding data of UBQ could be fitted to a two-state model. The thermodynamic parameters Tm = 54.6 degrees C, DeltaHTm = 56.5 kcal/mol, and DeltaCp = 890 cal/mol//K, were determined from the unfolding equilibrium constants calculated accordingly, and compared to values obtained by differential scanning calorimetry also under the assumption of a two-state transition, Tm = 57.0 degrees C, DeltaHm= 51.4 kcal/mol, and DeltaCp = 730 cal/mol//K.  相似文献   

4.
The equilibrium folding pathway of staphylococcal nucleas (SNase) has been approximated using a statistical thermodynamic formalism that utilizes the high-resolution structure of the native state as a template to generate a large ensemble of partially folded states. Close to 400,000 different states ranging from the native to the completely unfolded states were included in the analysis. The probability of each state was estimated using an empirical structural parametrization of the folding energetics. It is shown that this formalism predicts accurately the stability of the protein, the cooperativity of the folding/unfolding transition observed by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) or urea denaturation and the thermodynamic parameters for unfolding. More importantly, this formalism provides a quantitative account of the experimental hydrogen exchange protection factors measured under native conditions for SNase. These results suggest that the computer-generated distribution of states approximates well the ensemble of conformations existing in solution. Furthermore, this formalism represents the first model capable of quantitatively predicting within a unified framework the probability distribution of states seen under native conditions and its change upon unfolding. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Thermodynamic nonideality arising from the space-filling effect of added sucrose is employed to confirm that the reversible unfolding of ribonuclease A effected by acid may be described as an equilibrium between native and unfolded states of the enzyme. However, the extent of the volume change is far too small for the larger isomer to be the fully expanded state, a result signifying that the acid-mediated unfolding of ribonuclease does not conform with the two-state equilibrium model of protein denaturation. Although the thermal denaturation of ribonuclease A is characterized by a larger increase in volume, quantitative reappraisal of published results on the effects of glycerol on this transition at pH 2.8 (Gekko, K., and Timasheff, S. N., 1981 Biochemistry 20, 4677-4686) leads to an estimated volume increase that is much smaller than that inferred from hydrodynamic studies--a disparity attributed to the dual actions of glycerol as a space-filling solute and as a ligand that binds preferentially to the thermally unfolded form of the enzyme. Even in this unfavorable circumstance the fact that glycerol exerts a net excluded volume effect at least confirms that the thermal unfolding of ribonuclease A is an equilibrium transition between two discrete states. The strengths and limitations of using thermodynamic nonideality as a probe of the two-state equilibrium model of protein denaturation are discussed in the light of these findings.  相似文献   

6.
Understanding protein stabilization by small organic compounds is a topic of great practical importance. The effect of mannosylglycerate, a charged compatible solute typical of thermophilic microorganisms, on a variant of staphylococcal nuclease was investigated using several NMR spectroscopy methods. No structural changes were apparent from the chemical shifts of amide protons. Measurements of 15N relaxation and model-free analysis, water-amide saturation transfer (phase-modulated CLEAN chemical exchange), and hydrogen/deuterium exchange rates provided a detailed picture of the effects of mannosylglycerate on the backbone dynamics and time-averaged structure of this protein. The widest movements of the protein backbone were significantly constrained in the presence of mannosylglycerate, as indicated by the average 5-fold decrease of the hydrogen/deuterium exchange rates, but the effect on the millisecond timescale was small. At high frequencies, internal motions of staphylococcal nuclease were progressively restricted with increasing concentrations of mannosylglycerate or reduced temperature, while the opposite effect was observed with urea (a destabilizing solute). The order parameters showed a strong correlation with the changes in the Tm values induced by different solutes, determined by differential scanning calorimetry. These data show that mannosylglycerate caused a generalised reduction of backbone motions and demonstrate a correlation between protein stabilization and protein rigidification.  相似文献   

7.
For the purpose of equilibrium and kinetic folding-unfolding studies, the SH3 domain of alpha-spectrin (spc-SH3) has long been considered a classic two-state folding protein. In this work we have indeed observed that the thermal unfolding curves of spc-SH3 measured at pH 3.0 by differential scanning calorimetry, circular dichroism, and NMR follow apparently the two-state model when each unfolding profile is considered individually. Nevertheless, we have found that protein concentration has a marked effect upon the thermal unfolding profiles. This effect cannot be properly explained in terms of the two-state unfolding model and can only be interpreted in terms of the accumulation of intermediate associated states in equilibrium with the monomeric native and unfolded states. By chemical cross-linking and pulsed-field gradient NMR diffusion experiments we have been able to confirm the existence of associated states formed during spc-SH3 unfolding. A three-state model, in which a dimeric intermediate state is assumed to be significantly populated, provides the simplest interpretation of the whole set of thermal unfolding data and affords a satisfactory explanation for the concentration effects observed. Whereas at low concentrations the population of the associated intermediate state is negligible and the unfolding process consequently takes place in a two-state fashion, at concentrations above approximately 0.5 mM the population of the intermediate state becomes significant at temperatures between 45 degrees C and 80 degrees C and reaches up to 50% at the largest concentration investigated. The thermodynamic properties of the intermediate state implied by this analysis fall in between those of the unfolded state and the native ones, indicating a considerably disordered conformation, which appears to be stabilized by oligomerization.  相似文献   

8.
The urea-induced denaturation of dimeric Erythrina indica lectin (EIL) has been studied at pH 7.2 under equilibrium and kinetic conditions in the temperature range of 40-55 degrees C. The structure of EIL is largely unaffected in this temperature range in absence of denaturant, and also in 8 M urea after incubation for 24 h at ambient temperature. The equilibrium denaturation of EIL exhibits a monophasic unfolding transition from the native dimer to the unfolded monomer as monitored by fluorescence, far-UV CD, and size-exclusion FPLC. The thermodynamic parameters determined for the two-state unfolding equilibrium show that the free energy of unfolding (DeltaGu, aq) remains practically same between 40 and 55 degrees C, with a value of 11.8 +/- 0.6 kcal mol(-1) (monomer units). The unfolding kinetics of EIL describes a single exponential decay pattern, and the apparent rate constants determined at different temperatures indicate that the rate of the unfolding reaction increases several fold with increase in temperature. The presence of probe like external metal ions (Mn2+, Ca2+) does not influence the unfolding reaction thermodynamically or kinetically; however, the presence of EDTA affects only kinetics. The present results suggest that the ability of EIL to preserve the structural integrity against the highly denaturing conditions is linked primarily to its kinetic stability, and the synergic action of heat and denaturant is involved in the unfolding of the protein.  相似文献   

9.
Recombinant maltose-binding protein from Thermotoga maritima (TmMBP) was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity, applying heat incubation of the crude extract at 75 degrees C. As taken from the spectral, physicochemical and binding properties, the recombinant protein is indistinguishable from the natural protein isolated from the periplasm of Thermotoga maritima. At neutral pH, TmMBP exhibits extremely high intrinsic stability with a thermal transition >105 degrees C. Guanidinium chloride-induced equilibrium unfolding transitions at varying temperatures result in a stability maximum at approximately 40 degrees C. At room temperature, the thermodynamic analysis of the highly cooperative unfolding equilibrium transition yields DeltaG(N-->U)=100(+/-5) kJ mol(-1 )for the free energy of stabilization. Compared to mesophilic MBP from E. coli as a reference, this value is increased by about 60 kJ mol(-1). At temperatures around the optimal growth temperature of T. maritima (t(opt) approximately 80 degrees C), the yield of refolding does not exceed 80 %; the residual 20 % are misfolded, as indicated by a decrease in stability as well as loss of the maltose-binding capacity. TmMBP is able to bind maltose, maltotriose and trehalose with dissociation constants in the nanomolar to micromolar range, combining the substrate specificities of the homologs from the mesophilic bacterium E. coli and the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus litoralis. Fluorescence quench experiments allowed the dissociation constants of ligand binding to be quantified. Binding of maltose was found to be endothermic and entropy-driven, with DeltaH(b)=+47 kJ mol(-1) and DeltaS(b)=+257 J mol(-1) K(-1). Extrapolation of the linear vant'Hoff plot to t(opt) resulted in K(d) approximately 0.3 microM. This result is in agreement with data reported for the MBPs from E. coli and T. litoralis at their respective optimum growth temperatures, corroborating the general observation that proteins under their specific physiological conditions are in corresponding states.  相似文献   

10.
Temperature- and pressure-induced unfolding of staphylococcal nuclease (SNase) was studied by Royer, Winter et al. using a variety of experimental techniques (SAXS, FT-IR and fluorescence spectroscopy, DSC, PPC, densimetry). For a more detailed understanding of the underlying mechanistic processes of the different unfolding scenarios, we have carried out a series of molecular dynamics (MD) computer simulations on SNase. We investigated the initial changes of the structure of the protein upon application of pressure (up to 5 kbar) and discuss volumetric and structural differences between the native and pressure pre-denatured state. Additionally, we have obtained the compressibility of the protein and hydration water and compare these data with experimental results. As water plays a crucial role in determining the structure, dynamics and function of proteins, we undertook a detailed analysis of the structure of the interfacial water and the protein-solvent H-bond network as well. Moreover, we report here also MD results on the temperature-induced unfolding of SNase. The time evolution of the protein volume and solvent accessible surface area during thermal unfolding have been investigated, and we present a detailed discussion of the temperature-induced unfolding pathway of SNase in terms of secondary and tertiary structural changes.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Chaudhuri TK  Arai M  Terada TP  Ikura T  Kuwajima K 《Biochemistry》2000,39(50):15643-15651
The equilibrium and kinetics of the unfolding and refolding of authentic and recombinant human alpha-lactalbumin, the latter of which had an extra methionine residue at the N-terminus, were studied by circular dichroism spectroscopy, and the results were compared with the results for bovine and goat alpha-lactalbumins obtained in our previous studies. As observed in the bovine and goat proteins, the presence of the extra methionine residue in the recombinant protein remarkably destabilized the native state, and the destabilization was entirely ascribed to an increase in the rate of unfolding. The thermodynamic stability of the native state against the unfolded state was lower, and the thermodynamic stability of the molten globule state against the unfolded state was higher for the human protein than for the other alpha-lactalbumins previously studied. Thus, the population of the molten globule intermediate was higher during the equilibrium unfolding of human alpha-lactalbumin by guanidine hydrochloride. Unlike the molten globule states of the bovine and goat proteins, the human alpha-lactalbumin molten globule showed remarkably more intense circular dichroism ellipticity than the native state in the far-ultraviolet region below 225 nm. During refolding from the unfolded state, human alpha-lactalbumin thus exhibited overshoot kinetics, in which the alpha-helical peptide ellipticity exceeded the native value when the molten globule folding intermediate was formed in the burst phase. The subsequent folding involved reorganization of nonnative secondary structures. It should be noted that the rate constant of the major refolding phase was approximately the same among the three types of alpha-lactalbumin and that the rate constant of unfolding was accelerated 18-600 times in the human protein, and these results interpreted the lower thermodynamic stability of this protein.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of Mg2+ on the thermal inactivation and unfolding of rabbit muscle creatine kinase has been studied for various temperatures and Mg2+ concentrations. Increasing the Mg2+ concentration in the denatured system significantly enhanced the inactivation and unfolding of creatine kinase during thermal denaturation. The analysis of the kinetic course of substrate reaction during thermal inactivation showed that at 47 degrees C the increased free Mg2+ concentration caused the creatine kinase inactivation rate to increase. Increasing the temperature strengthened the effect of Mg2+ on the thermal inactivation. Control experiments showed that treating native creatine kinase with different concentrations of Mg2+ did not change the enzymatic activity. The fluorescence emission spectra showed that the emission maximum for creatine kinase red-shifted from 335 to 337 nm during thermal denaturation at 47 degrees C for 10 min, while the presence of 3 mM Mg2+ caused the enzyme emission maximum to red-shift from 335 to 342.5 nm for the same thermal denaturation conditions. In addition, Mg2+ also enhanced the unfolding of the equilibrium state and decreased the time required to reach the equilibrium state of creatine kinase at 47 degrees C. The potential biological significance of these results are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
M M Santoro  Y Liu  S M Khan  L X Hou  D W Bolen 《Biochemistry》1992,31(23):5278-5283
Organisms and cellular systems which have adapted to stresses such as high temperature, desiccation, and urea-concentrating environments have responded by concentrating particular organic solutes known as osmolytes. These osmolytes are believed to confer protection to enzyme and other macromolecular systems against such denaturing stresses. Differential scanning calorimetric (DSC) experiments were performed on ribonuclease A and hen egg white lysozyme in the presence of varying concentrations of the osmolytes glycine, sarcosine, N,N-dimethylglycine, and betaine. Solutions containing up to several molar concentrations of these solutes were found to result in considerable increases in the thermal unfolding transition temperature (Tm) for these proteins. DSC scans of ribonuclease A in the presence of up to 8.2 M sarcosine resulted in reversible two-state unfolding transitions with Tm increases of up to 22 degrees C and unfolding enthalpy changes which were independent of Tm. On the basis of the thermodynamic parameters observed, 8.2 M sarcosine results in a stabilization free energy increase of 7.2 kcal/mol for ribonuclease A at 65 degrees C. This translates into more than a 45,000-fold increase in stability of the native form of ribonuclease A over that in the absence of sarcosine at this temperature. Catalytic activity measurements in the presence of 4 M sarcosine give kcat and Km values that are largely unchanged from those in the absence of sarcosine. DSC of lysozyme unfolding in the presence of these osmolytes also results in Tm increases of up to 23 degrees C; however, significant irreversibly occurs with this protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Unfolding and refolding kinetics of human FKBP12 C22A were monitored by fluorescence emission over a wide range of urea concentration in the presence and absence of protecting osmolytes glycerol, proline, sarcosine and trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO). Unfolding is well described by a mono-exponential process, while refolding required a minimum of two exponentials for an adequate fit throughout the urea concentration range considered. The bi-exponential behavior resulted from complex coupling between protein folding, and prolyl isomerization in the denatured state in which the urea-dependent rate constant for folding was greater than, equal to, and less than the rate constants for prolyl isomerization within the urea concentration range of zero to five molar. Amplitudes and the observed folding and unfolding rate constants were fitted to a reversible three-state model composed of two sequential steps involving the native state and a folding-competent denatured species thermodynamically linked to a folding-incompetent denatured species. Excellent agreement between thermodynamic parameters for FKBP12 C22A folding calculated from the kinetic parameters and those obtained directly from equilibrium denaturation assays provides strong support for the applicability of the mechanism, and provides evidence that FKBP12 C22A folding/unfolding is two-state, with prolyl isomer heterogeneity in the denatured ensemble. Despite the chemical diversity of the protecting osmolytes, they all exhibit the same kinetic behavior of increasing the rate constant of folding and decreasing the rate constant for unfolding. Osmolyte effects on folding/unfolding kinetics are readily explained in terms of principles established in understanding osmolyte effects on protein stability. These principles involve the osmophobic effect, which raises the Gibbs energy of the denatured state due to exposure of peptide backbone, thereby increasing the folding rate. This effect also plays a key role in decreasing the unfolding rate when, as is often the case, the activated complex exposes more backbone than is exposed in the native state.  相似文献   

16.
Understanding the origins of cooperativity in proteins remains an important topic in protein folding. This study describes experimental folding/unfolding equilibrium and kinetic studies of the engineered protein Ubq-UIM, consisting of ubiquitin (Ubq) fused to the sequence of the ubiquitin interacting motif (UIM) via a short linker. Urea-induced folding/unfolding profiles of Ubq-UIM were monitored by far-UV circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopies and compared to those of the isolated Ubq domain. It was found that the equilibrium data for Ubq-UIM is inconsistent with a two-state model. Analysis of the kinetics of folding shows similarity in the folding transition state ensemble between Ubq and Ubq-UIM, suggesting that formation of Ubq domain is independent of UIM. The major contribution to the stabilization of Ubq-UIM, relative to Ubq, was found to be in the rates of unfolding. Moreover, it was found that the kinetic m-values for Ubq-UIM unfolding, monitored by different probes (far-UV circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopies), are different; thereby, further supporting deviations from a two-state behavior. A thermodynamic linkage model that involves four states was found to be applicable to the urea-induced unfolding of Ubq-UIM, which is in agreement with the previous temperature-induced unfolding study. The applicability of the model was further supported by site-directed variants of Ubq-UIM that have altered stabilities of Ubq/UIM interface and/or stabilities of individual Ubq- and UIM-domains. All variants show increased cooperativity and one variant, E43N_Ubq-UIM, appears to behave very close to an equilibrium two-state.  相似文献   

17.
Pressure-induced unfolding of 23-kDa protein from spinach photosystem II has been systematically investigated at various experimental conditions. Thermodynamic equilibrium studies indicate that the protein is very sensitive to pressure. At 20 degrees C and pH 5.5, 23-kDa protein shows a reversible two-state unfolding transition under pressure with a midpoint near 160 MPa, which is much lower than most natural proteins studied to date. The free energy (DeltaG(u)) and volume change (DeltaV(u)) for the unfolding are 5.9 kcal/mol and -160 ml/mol, respectively. It was found that NaCl and sucrose significantly stabilize the protein from unfolding and the stabilization is associated not only with an increase in DeltaG(u) but also with a decrease in DeltaV(u). The pressure-jump studies of 23-kDa protein reveal a negative activation volume for unfolding (-66.2 ml/mol) and a positive activation volume for refolding (84.1 ml/mol), indicating that, in terms of system volume, the protein transition state lies between the folded and unfolded states. Examination of the temperature effect on the unfolding kinetics indicates that the thermal expansibility of the transition state and the unfolded state of 23-kDa protein are closer to each other and they are larger than that of the native state. The diverse pressure-refolding pathways of 23-kDa protein in some conditions were revealed in pressure-jump kinetics.  相似文献   

18.
We here compare thermal unfolding of the apo and holo forms of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans flavodoxin, which noncovalently binds a flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor. In the case of the apo form, fluorescence and far-UV circular dichroism (CD) detected transitions are reversible but do not overlap (T(m) of 50 and 60 degrees C, respectively, pH 7). The thermal transitions for the holo form follow the same pattern but occur at higher temperatures (T(m) of 60 and 67 degrees C for fluorescence and CD transitions, respectively, pH 7). The holoprotein transitions are also reversible and exhibit no protein concentration dependence (above 10 microM), indicating that the FMN remains bound to the polypeptide throughout. Global analysis shows that the thermal reactions for both apo and holo forms proceed via an equilibrium intermediate that has approximately 90% nativelike secondary structure and significant enthalpic stabilization relative to the unfolded states. Incubation of unfolded holoflavodoxin at high temperatures results in FMN dissociation. Rebinding of FMN at these conditions is nominal, and therefore, cooling of holoprotein heated to 95 degrees C follows the refolding pathway of the apo form. However, FMN readily rebinds to the apoprotein at lower temperatures. We conclude that (1) a three-state thermal unfolding behavior appears to be conserved among long- and short-chain, as well as apo and holo forms of, flavodoxins and (2) flavodoxin's thermal stability (in both native and intermediate states) is augmented by the presence of the FMN cofactor.  相似文献   

19.
The reversibility of the binding of human apolipoprotein A-I (apo A-I) to phospholipid has been monitored through the influence of guanidine hydrochloride (Gdn-HCl) on the isothermal denaturation and renaturation of apo A-1/dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) complexes at 24 degree C. Denaturation was studied by incubating discoidal 1:100 and vesicular 1:500 mol/mol apo A-I/DMPC complexes with up to 7 M Gdn-HCl for up to 72 h. Unfolding of apo A-I molecules was observed from circular dichroism spectra while the distribution of protein between free and lipid-associated states was monitored by density gradient ultracentrifugation. The ability of apo A-I to combine with DMPC in the presence of Gdn-HCl at 24 degrees C was also investigated by similar procedures. In both the denaturation and renaturation of 1:100 and 1:500 complexes, the final values of the molar ellipticity and the ratio of free to bound apo A-I at various concentrations of Gdn-HCl are dependent on the initial state of the lipid and protein; apo A-I is more resistant to denaturation when Gdn-HCl is added to existing complexes than to a mixture of apo A-I and DMPC. There is an intermediate state in the denaturation pathway of apo A-I/DMPC complexes which is not present in the renaturation; the intermediate comprises partially unfold apo A-I molecules still associated with the complex by some of their apolar residues. Complete unfolding of the alpha helix and subsequent desorption of the apo A-I molecules from the lipid/water interface involve cooperative exposure of these apolar residues to the aqueous phase. The energy barrier associated with this desorption step makes the binding of apo A-I to DMPC a thermodynamically irreversible process. Consequently, binding constants of apo A-I and PC cannot be calculated simply from equilibrium thermodynamic treatments of the partitioning of protein between free and bound states. Apo A-I molecules do not exchange freely between the lipid-free and lipid-bound states, and extra work is required to drive protein molecules off the surface. The required increased in surface pressure can be achieved by a net mass transfer of protein to the surface; in vivo, increases in the surface pressure of lipoproteins by lipolysis can cause protein desorption.  相似文献   

20.
Apomyoglobin kinetic and equilibrium unfolding and folding processes were studied at pH 6.2, 11 degrees C by stopped-flow tryptophan fluorescence. There are two distinct consecutive processes in apomyoglobin folding process, namely, the protein fast transition between the unfolded (U) and an intermediate (I) states (U <----> I) and slow transition between the intermediate and the native (N) states (I <----> N). Accumulation of the intermediate state was observed in the wide range of urea concentrations. The presence of the intermediate state was shown even beyond the middle transition on the unfolding limb. The dependence of observed folding/unfolding rates on urea concentration (chevron plot) was obtained. The shape of this dependence was compared with that of two-state proteins, folding from the U to N state.  相似文献   

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