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1.
The conformational stabilities of the vnd (ventral nervous system defective)/NK-2 homeodomain [HD(wt); residues 1-80 that encompass the 60-residue homeodomain] and those harboring mutations in helix III of the DNA recognition site [HD(H52R) and HD(H52R/T56W)] have been investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and ellipticity changes at 222 nm. Thermal unfolding reactions at pH 7.4 are reversible and repeatable in the presence of 50-500 mM NaCl with DeltaC(p) = 0.52 +/- 0.04 kcal K(-1) mol(-1). A substantial stabilization of HD(wt) is produced by 50 mM phosphate or by the addition of 100-500 mM NaCl to 50 mM Hepes, pH 7.4, buffer (from T(m) = 35.5 degrees C to T(m) 43-51 degrees C; DeltaH(vH) congruent with 47 +/- 5 kcal mol(-1)). The order of stability is HD(H52R/T56W) > HD(H52R) > HD(wt), irrespective of the anions present. Progress curves for ellipticity changes at 222 nm as a function of increasing temperature are fitted well by a two-state unfolding model, and the cooperativity of secondary structure changes is greater for mutant homeodomains than for HD(wt) and also is increased by adding 100 mM NaCl to Hepes buffer. A 33% quench of the intrinsic tryptophanyl residue fluorescence of HD(wt) by phosphate binding (K(D)' = 2.6 +/- 0.3 mM phosphate) is reversed approximately 60% by DNA binding. Thermodynamic parameters for vnd/NK-2 homeodomain proteins binding sequence-specific 18 bp DNA have been determined by isothermal titration calorimetry (10-30 degrees C). Values of DeltaC(p) are +0.25, -0.17, and -0.10 +/- 0.04 kcal K(-1) mol(-1) for HD(wt), HD(H52R), and HD(H52R/T56W) binding duplex DNA, respectively. Interactions of homeodomains with DNA are enthalpically controlled at 298 K and pH 7.4 with corresponding DeltaH values of -6.6 +/- 0.5, -10.8 +/- 0.1, and -9.0 +/- 0.6 kcal mol(-1) and DeltaG' values of -11.0 +/- 0.1, -11.0 +/- 0.1, and -11.3 +/- 0.3 kcal mol(-1) with a binding stoichiometry of 1.0 +/- 0.1. Thermodynamic parameters for DNA binding are not predicted from homeodomain structural changes that occur upon complexing to DNA and must reflect also solvent and possibly DNA rearrangements.  相似文献   

2.
Fodor E  Ginsburg A 《Proteins》2006,64(1):13-18
Titrations of specific 18-bp duplex DNA with the cardiac-specific homeodomain Nkx2.5(C56S) have utilized an ultrasensitive isothermal titration calorimeter (ITC). As the free DNA nears depletion, we observe large apparent decreases in the binding enthalpy when the DNA is impaired or when the temperature is sufficiently high to produce some unfolding of the free protein. Either effect can be attributed to refolding of the biopolymer that occurs as a result of stabilization due to the large favorable change in free energy on the homeodomain binding to DNA (-49.4 kJ/mol at 298 K). In either case, thermodynamic parameters obtained in such ITC experiments are unreliable. By using a lower temperature (85 vs. 95 degrees C) during the annealing of complementary DNA strands, damage of the 18-bp duplex DNA (T(m) = 72 degrees C) is avoided, and titrations with the homeodomain are normal at temperatures from 10 to 40 degrees C when >95% of the protein is folded. Under the latter conditions, the heat capacity plot is linear with a DeltaC(p) value of -0.80 +/- 0.03 kJ K(-1) mol(-1), which is more negative than that calculated from the burial of solvent accessible surface areas (-0.64 +/- 0.05 kJ K(-1) mol(-1)), consistent with water structures being at the protein-DNA interfaces.  相似文献   

3.
The peripheral subunit-binding domain (PSBD) of the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase (E2, EC 2.3.1.12) binds tightly but mutually exclusively to dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase (E3, EC 1.8.1.4) and pyruvate decarboxylase (E1, EC 1.2.4.1) in the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments demonstrated that the enthalpies of binding (DeltaH degrees ) of both E3 and E1 with the PSBD varied with salt concentration, temperature, pH, and buffer composition. There is little significant difference in the free energies of binding (DeltaG degrees = -12.6 kcal/mol for E3 and = -12.9 kcal/mol for E1 at pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C). However, the association with E3 was characterized by a small, unfavorable enthalpy change (DeltaH degrees = +2.2 kcal/mol) and a large, positive entropy change (TDeltaS degrees = +14.8 kcal/mol), whereas that with E1 was accompanied by a favorable enthalpy change (DeltaH degrees = -8.4 kcal/mol) and a less positive entropy change (TDeltaS degrees = +4.5 kcal/mol). Values of DeltaC(p) of -316 cal/molK and -470 cal/molK were obtained for the binding of E3 and E1, respectively. The value for E3 was not compatible with the DeltaC(p) calculated from the nonpolar surface area buried in the crystal structure of the E3-PSBD complex. In this instance, a large negative DeltaC(p) is not indicative of a classical hydrophobic interaction. In differential scanning calorimetry experiments, the midpoint melting temperature (T(m)) of E3 increased from 91 degrees C to 97.1 degrees C when it was bound to PSBD, and that of E1 increased from 65.2 degrees C to 70.0 degrees C. These high T(m) values eliminate unfolding as a major source of the anomalous DeltaC(p) effects at the temperatures (10-37 degrees C) used for the ITC experiments.  相似文献   

4.
Henkels CH  Oas TG 《Biochemistry》2005,44(39):13014-13026
In Bacillus subtilis, P protein is the noncatalytic component of ribonuclease P (RNase P) that is critical for achieving maximal nuclease activity under physiological conditions. P protein is predominantly unfolded (D) at neutral pH and low ionic strength; however, it folds upon the addition of sulfate anions (ligands) as well as the osmolyte trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) [Henkels, C. H., Kurz, J. C., Fierke, C. A., and Oas, T. G. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 2777-2789]. Since the molecular mechanisms that drive protein folding for these two solutes are different, CD thermal denaturation studies were employed to dissect the thermodynamics of protein unfolding from the two folded states. A global fit of the free-energy of TMAO-folded P protein versus [TMAO] and temperature yields T(S), DeltaH(S), and DeltaC(p) of unfolding for the poorly populated, unliganded, folded state (N) in the absence of TMAO. These thermodynamic parameters were used in the fit of the data from the coupled unfolding/ligand dissociation reaction to obtain the sulfate dissociation constant (K(d)) and the DeltaH and DeltaC(p) of dissociation. These fits yielded a DeltaC(p) of protein unfolding of 826 +/- 23 cal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1) and a DeltaC(p) of 1554 +/- 29 cal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1) for the coupled unfolding and dissociation reaction (NL(2) --> D + 2L). The apparent stoichiometry of sulfate binding is two, so the DeltaC(p) increment of ligand dissociation is 363 +/- 9 cal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1) per site. Because N and NL(2) appear to be structurally similar and therefore similarly solvated using standard biophysical analyses, we attribute a substantial portion of this DeltaC(p) increment to an increase in conformational heterogeneity coincident with the NL(2) --> N + 2L transition.  相似文献   

5.
The stability of the N-terminal domain of the ribosomal protein L9, NTL9, from Bacillus stearothermophilus has been monitored by circular dichroism at various temperatures and chemical denaturant concentrations in H2O and D2O. The basic thermodynamic parameters for the unfolding reaction, deltaH(o), deltaS(o), and deltaC(o)p, were determined by global analysis of temperature and denaturant effects on stability. The data were well fit by a model that assumes stability varies linearly with denaturant concentration and that uses the Gibbs-Helmholtz equation to model changes in stability with temperature. The results obtained from the global analysis are consistent with information obtained from individual thermal and chemical denaturations. NTL9 has a maximum stability of 3.78 +/- 0.25 kcal mol(-1) at 14 degrees C. DeltaH(o)(25 degrees C) for protein unfolding equals 9.9 +/- 0.7 kcal mol(-1) and TdeltaS(o)++(25 degrees C) equals 6.2 +/- 0.6 kcal mol(-1). DeltaC(o)p equals 0.53 +/- 0.06 kcal mol(-1) deg(-1). There is a small increase in stability when D2O is substituted for H2O. Based on the results from global analysis, NTL9 is 1.06 +/- 0.60 kcal mol(-1) more stable in D2O at 25 degrees C and Tm is increased by 5.8 +/- 3.6 degrees C in D2O. Based on the results from individual denaturation experiments, NTL9 is 0.68 +/- 0.68 kcal mol(-1) more stable in D2O at 25 degrees C and Tm is increased by 3.5 +/- 2.1 degrees C in D2O. Within experimental error there are no changes in deltaH(o) (25 degrees C) when D2O is substituted for H2O.  相似文献   

6.
Little is known about the thermodynamic forces that drive the folding pathways of higher-order RNA structure. In this study, we employ calorimetric [isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC)] and spectroscopic (NMR and UV) methods to characterize the thermodynamics of the GAAA tetraloop-receptor interaction, utilizing a previously described bivalent construct. ITC studies indicate that the bivalent interaction is enthalpy driven and highly stable, with a binding constant (K(obs)) of 5.5x10(6) M(-1) and enthalpy (DeltaH(obs)(o)) of -33.8 kcal/mol at 45 degrees C in 20 mM KCl and 2 mM MgCl(2). Thus, we derive the DeltaH(obs)(o) for a single tetraloop-receptor interaction to be -16.9 kcal/mol at these conditions. UV absorbance data indicate that an increase in base stacking quality contributes to the enthalpy of complex formation. These highly favorable thermodynamics are consistent with the known critical role for the tetraloop-receptor motif in the folding of large RNAs. Additionally, a significant heat capacity change (DeltaC(p,obs)(o)) of -0.24 kcal mol(-1) K(-1) was determined by ITC. DSC and UV-monitored thermal denaturation experiments indicate that the bivalent tetraloop-receptor construct follows a minimally five-state unfolding pathway and suggest the observed DeltaC(p,obs)(o) for the interaction results from a temperature-dependent unbound receptor RNA structure.  相似文献   

7.
Thermodynamic parameters describing the phage 434 Cro protein have been determined by calorimetry and, independently, by far-UV circular dichroism (CD) measurements of isothermal urea denaturations and thermal denaturations at fixed urea concentrations. These equilibrium unfolding transitions are adequately described by the two-state model. The far-UV CD denaturation data yield average temperature-independent values of 0.99 +/- 0.10 kcal mol(-)(1) M(-)(1) for m and 0.98 +/- 0.05 kcal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1) for DeltaC(p)()(,U), the heat capacity change accompanying unfolding. Calorimetric data yield a temperature-independent DeltaC(p)()(,U) of 0.95 +/- 0.30 kcal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1) or a temperature-dependent value of 1.00 +/- 0.10 kcal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1) at 25 degrees C. DeltaC(p)()(,U) and m determined for 434 Cro are in accord with values predicted using known empirical correlations with structure. The free energy of unfolding is pH-dependent, and the protein is completely unfolded at pH 2.0 and 25 degrees C as judged by calorimetry or CD. The stability of 434 Cro is lower than those observed for the structurally similar N-terminal domain of the repressor of phage 434 (R1-69) or of phage lambda (lambda(6)(-)(85)), but is close to the value reported for the putative monomeric lambda Cro. Since a protein's structural stability is important in determining its intracellular stability and turnover, the stability of Cro relative to the repressor could be a key component of the regulatory circuit controlling the levels and, consequently, the functions of the two proteins in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
SecB is a cytosolic tetrameric chaperone in Escherichia coli, which maintains polypeptides, destined for export in a translocation competent state. The thermodynamics of unfolding of SecB was studied as a function of protein concentration, by using high sensitivity-differential scanning calorimetry and spectroscopic methods. The thermal unfolding of tetrameric SecB is reversible and can be well described as a two-state transition in which the folded tetramer is converted directly to unfolded monomers. Increasing the pH decreases the stability of the tetramer significantly, the T(m) changing from 341.3 K at pH 6.5 to 332.6 K at pH 9.5. The value of DeltaC(p) obtained from measurements of DeltaH(m) as a function of T(m) was 10.7 +/- 0.7 kcal mol(-1) K(-1). The value of DeltaC(p) is among the highest measured for a multimeric protein. At 298 K, pH 7.4, the DeltaG degrees (u) for the SecB tetramer is 27.9 +/- 2 kcal mol(-1). Denaturant-mediated unfolding of SecB was found to be irreversible. The reactivity of the four solvent-exposed free thiols in tetrameric SecB is salt dependent. The kinetics of reactivity suggests that these four cysteines are in close proximity to each other and that these residues on each monomer are in chemically identical environments. The thermodynamic data suggest that SecB is a stable, well-folded, and tightly packed tetramer and that substrate binding occurs at a surface site rather than at an interior cavity.  相似文献   

9.
We showed that the alpha-CH(2) --> NH substitution in octanoyl-CoA alters the ground and transition state energies for the binding of the CoA ligands to medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD), and such an effect is caused by a small electrostatic difference between the ligands. To ascertain the extent that the electrostatic contribution of the ligand structure and/or the enzyme site environment modulates the thermodynamics of the enzyme-ligand interaction, we undertook comparative microcalorimetric studies for the binding of 2-azaoctanoyl-CoA (alpha-CH(2) --> NH substituted octanoyl-CoA) and octenoyl-CoA to the wild-type and Glu-376 --> Gln mutant enzymes. The experimental data revealed that both enthalpy (DeltaH degrees ) and heat capacity changes (DeltaC(p) degrees ) for the binding of 2-azaoctanoyl-CoA (DeltaH degrees (298) = -21.7 +/- 0.8 kcal/mole, DeltaC(p) degrees = -0.627 +/- 0.04 kcal/mole/K) to the wild-type MCAD were more negative than those obtained for the binding of octenoyl-CoA (DeltaH degrees (298) = -17.2 +/- 1.6 kcal/mole, DeltaC(p) degrees = -0.526 +/- 0.03 kcal/mole/K). Of these, the decrease in the magnitude of DeltaC(p) degrees for the binding of 2-azaoctanoyl-CoA (vis-à-vis octenoyl-CoA) to the enzyme was unexpected, because the former ligand could be envisaged to be more polar than the latter. To our further surprise, the ligand-dependent discrimination in the above parameters was completely abolished on Glu-376 --> Gln mutation of the enzyme. Both DeltaH degrees and DeltaC(p) degrees values for the binding of 2-azaoctanoyl-CoA (DeltaH degrees (298) = -13.3 +/- 0.6 kcal/mole, DeltaC(p) degrees = -0.511 +/- 0.03 kcal/mole/K) to the E376Q mutant enzyme were found to be correspondingly identical to those obtained for the binding of octenoyl-CoA (DeltaH degrees (298) = -13.2 +/- 0.6 kcal/mole, DeltaC(p) degrees = -0.520 +/- 0.02 kcal/mole/K). However, in neither case could the experimentally determined DeltaC(p) degrees values be predicted on the basis of the changes in the water accessible surface areas of the enzyme and ligand species. Arguments are presented that the origin of the above thermodynamic differences lies in solvent reorganization and water-mediated electrostatic interaction between ligands and enzyme site groups, and such interactions are intrinsic to the molecular basis of the enzyme-ligand complementarity.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
Energetic basis of molecular recognition in a DNA aptamer   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The thermal stability and ligand binding properties of the L-argininamide-binding DNA aptamer (5'-GATCGAAACGTAGCGCCTTCGATC-3') were studied by spectroscopic and calorimetric methods. Differential calorimetric studies showed that the uncomplexed aptamer melted in a two-state reaction with a melting temperature T(m)=50.2+/-0.2 degrees C and a folding enthalpy DeltaH(0)(fold)=-49.0+/-2.1 kcal mol(-1). These values agree with values of T(m)=49.6 degrees C and DeltaH(0)(fold)=-51.2 kcal mol(-1) predicted for a simple hairpin structure. Melting of the uncomplexed aptamer was dependent upon salt concentration, but independent of strand concentration. The T(m) of aptamer melting was found to increase as L-argininamide concentrations increased. Analysis of circular dichroism titration data using a single-site binding model resulted in the determination of a binding free energy DeltaG(0)(bind)=-5.1 kcal mol(-1). Isothermal titration calorimetry studies revealed an exothermic binding reaction with DeltaH(0)(bind)=-8.7 kcal mol(-1). Combination of enthalpy and free energy produce an unfavorable entropy of -TDeltaS(0)=+3.6 kcal mol(-1). A molar heat capacity change of -116 cal mol(-1) K(-1) was determined from calorimetric measurements at four temperatures over the range of 15-40 degrees C. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to explore the structures of the unligated and ligated aptamer structures. From the calculated changes in solvent accessible surface areas of these structures a molar heat capacity change of -125 cal mol(-1) K(-1) was calculated, a value in excellent agreement with the experimental value. The thermodynamic signature, along with the coupled CD spectral changes, suggest that the binding of L-argininamide to its DNA aptamer is an induced-fit process in which the binding of the ligand is thermodynamically coupled to a conformational ordering of the nucleic acid.  相似文献   

13.
Surfactin is a bacterial lipopeptide with powerful surfactant-like properties. High-sensitivity isothermal titration calorimetry was used to study the self association and membrane partitioning of surfactin. The critical micellar concentration (CMC), was 7.5 microM, the heat of micellization was endothermic with DeltaH(w-->m)(Su) = +4.0 kcal/mol, and the free energy of micellization DeltaG(O,w-->m)(Su) = -9.3 kcal/mol (25 degrees C; 100 mM NaCl; 10 mM TRIS, 1 mM EDTA; pH 8.5). The specific heat capacity of micellization was deduced from temperature dependence of DeltaH(w-->m)(Su) as DeltaC(w-->m)(P) = -250 +/- 10 cal/(mol.K). The data can be explained by combining the hydrophobicity of the fatty acyl chain with that of the hydrophobic amino acids. The membrane partition equilibrium was studied using small (30 nm) and large (100 nm) unilamellar POPC vesicles. At 25 degrees C, the partition coefficient, K, was (2.2 +/- 0.2) x 10(4) M(-1) for large vesicles leading to a free energy of DeltaG(O, w-->b)(Su) = -8.3 kcal/mol. The partition enthalpy was again endothermic, with DeltaH(w-->b)(Su) = 9 +/- 1 kcal/mol. The strong preference of surfactin for micelle formation over membrane insertion explains the high membrane-destabilizing activity of the peptide. For surfactin and a variety of non-ionic detergents, the surfactant-to-lipid ratio, inducing membrane solubilization, R(sat)(b), can be predicted by the simple relationship R(sat)(b) approximately K. CMC.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Sequence-specific DNA recognition by bacterial integrase Tn916 involves structural rearrangements of both the protein and the DNA duplex. Energetic contributions from changes of conformation, thermal motions and soft vibrational modi of the protein, the DNA, and the complex significantly influence the energetic profile of protein-DNA association. Understanding the energetics of such a complicated system requires not only a detailed calorimetric investigation of the association reaction but also of the components in isolation. Here we report on the conformational stability of the integrase Tn916 DNA binding domain and its cognate 13 base pair target DNA duplex. Using a combination of temperature and denaturant induced unfolding experiments, we find that the 74-residue DNA binding domain is compact and unfolds cooperatively with only small deviation from two-state behavior. Scanning calorimetry reveals an increase of the heat capacity of the native protein attributable to increased thermal fluctuations. From the combined calorimetric and spectroscopic experiments, the parameters of protein unfolding are T(m) = 43.8 +/- 0.3 degrees C, DeltaH(m) = 255 +/- 18 kJ mol(-1), DeltaS(m) = 0.80 +/- 0.06 kJ mol(-1), and DeltaC(p) = 5.0 +/- 0.8 kJ K(-1) mol(-1). The DNA target duplex displays a thermodynamic signature typical of short oligonucleotide duplexes: significant heat absorption due to end fraying and twisting precedes cooperative unfolding and dissociation. The parameters for DNA unfolding and dissociation are DeltaH(m) = 335 +/- 4 kJ mol(-1) and DeltaC(p) = 2.7 +/- 0.9 kJ K(-(1) mol(-1). The results reported here have been instrumental in interpreting the thermodynamic features of the association reaction of the integrase with its 13 base pair target DNA duplex reported in the accompanying paper [Milev et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 3481-3491].  相似文献   

16.
The conformational and thermal stability of full-length hemagglutinin (HA) of influenza virus (strain X31) has been investigated using a combination of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), analytical ultracentrifugation, fluorescence, and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy as a function of pH. HA sediments as a rosette comprised of 5-6 trimers (31-35 S) over the pH range of 7.4-5.4. The DSC profile of HA in the native state at pH 7.4 is characterized by a single cooperative endotherm with a transition temperature (Tm) of 66 degrees C and unfolding enthalpy (DeltaH(cal)) of 800 kcal x (mol of trimer)(-1). Upon acidification to pH 5.4, there is a significant decrease in the transition temperature (from 66 to 45 degrees C), unfolding enthalpy [from 800 to 260 kcal x (mol of trimer)(-1)], and DeltaH(cal)/DeltaH(vH) ratio (from 3.0 to approximately 1.3). Whereas the far- and near-UV ellipticities are maintained over this pH range, there is an acid-induced increase in surface hydrophobicity and decrease in intrinsic tryptophanyl fluorescence. The major contribution to the DSC endotherm arises from unfolding HA1 domains. The relationship between acid-induced changes in thermal stability and the fusion activity of HA has been examined by evaluating the kinetics and extent of fusion of influenza virus with erythrocytes over the temperature and pH range of the DSC measurements. Surprisingly, X31 influenza virus retains its fusion activity at acidic pH and temperatures significantly below the unfolding transition of HA. This finding is consistent with the notion that the fusion activity of influenza virus may involve structural changes of only a small fraction of HA molecules.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Bachhawat K  Kapoor M  Dam TK  Surolia A 《Biochemistry》2001,40(24):7291-7300
Allium sativum agglutinin (ASAI) is a heterodimeric mannose-specific bulb lectin possessing two polypeptide chains of molecular mass 11.5 and 12.5 kDa. The thermal unfolding of ASAI, characterized by differential scanning calorimetry and circular dichroism, shows it to be highly reversible and can be defined as a two-state process in which the folded dimer is converted directly to the unfolded monomers (A2 if 2U). Its conformational stability has been determined as a function of temperature, GdnCl concentration, and pH using a combination of thermal and isothermal GdnCl-induced unfolding monitored by DSC, far-UV CD, and fluorescence, respectively. Analyses of these data yielded the heat capacity change upon unfolding (DeltaC(p) and also the temperature dependence of the thermodynamic parameters, namely, DeltaG, DeltaH, and DeltaS. The fit of the stability curve to the modified Gibbs-Helmholtz equation provides an estimate of the thermodynamic parameters DeltaH(g), DeltaS(g), and DeltaC(p) as 174.1 kcal x mol(-1), 0.512 kcal x mol(-1) x K(-1), and 3.41 kcal x mol(-1) x K(-1), respectively, at T(g) = 339.4 K. Also, the free energy of unfolding, DeltaG(s), at its temperature of maximum stability (T(s) = 293 K) is 13.13 kcal x mol(-1). Unlike most oligomeric proteins studied so far, the lectin shows excellent agreement between the experimentally determined DeltaC(p) (3.2 +/- 0.28 kcal x mol(-1) x K(-1)) and those evaluated from a calculation of its accessible surface area. This in turn suggests that the protein attains a completely unfolded state irrespective of the method of denaturation. The absence of any folding intermediates suggests the quaternary interactions to be the major contributor to the conformational stability of the protein, which correlates well with its X-ray structure. The small DeltaC(p) for the unfolding of ASAI reflects a relatively small, buried hydrophobic core in the folded dimeric protein.  相似文献   

19.
The thermodynamic and spectroscopic properties of a cysteine-free variant of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (AS-DHFR) were investigated using the combined effects of urea and temperature as denaturing agents. Circular dichroism (CD), absorption, and fluorescence spectra were recorded during temperature-induced unfolding at different urea concentrations and during urea-induced unfolding at different temperatures. The first three vectors obtained by singular-value decomposition of each set of unfolding spectra were incorporated into a global analysis of a unique thermodynamic model. Although individual unfolding profiles can be described as a two-state process, a simultaneous fit of 99 vectors requires a three-state model as the minimal scheme to describe the unfolding reaction along both perturbation axes. The model, which involves native (N), intermediate (I), and unfolded (U) states, predicts a maximum apparent stability, DeltaG degrees (NU), of 6 kcal mol(-)(1) at 15 degrees C, an apparent m(NU) value of 2 kcal mol(-)(1) M(-)(1), and an apparent heat capacity change, DeltaC(p)()(-NU), of 2.5 kcal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1). The intermediate species has a maximum stability of approximately 2 kcal mol(-)(1) and a compactness closer to that of the native than to that of the unfolded state. The population of the intermediate is maximal ( approximately 70%) around 50 degrees C and falls below the limits of detection of > or =2 M urea or at temperatures of <35 or >65 degrees C. The fluorescence properties of the equilibrium intermediate resemble those of a transient intermediate detected during refolding from the urea-denatured state, suggesting that a tryptophan-containing hydrophobic cluster in the adenosine-binding domain plays a key role in both the equilibrium and kinetic reactions. The CD spectroscopic properties of the native state reveal the presence of two principal isoforms that differ in ligand binding affinities and in the packing of the adenosine-binding domain. The relative populations of these species change slightly with temperature and do not depend on the urea concentration, implying that the two native isoforms are well-structured and compact. Global analysis of data from multiple spectroscopic probes and several methods of unfolding is a powerful tool for revealing structural and thermodynamic properties of partially and fully folded forms of DHFR.  相似文献   

20.
This study examines the characteristics of binding of berberine to the human telomeric d[AG(3)(T(2)AG(3))(3)] quadruplex. By employing UV-visible spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry, we found that the binding affinity of berberine to the human telomeric quadruplex is 10(6). The complete thermodynamic profile for berberine binding to the quadruplex, at 25 degrees C, shows a small negative enthalpy (DeltaH) of -1.7 kcal.mol(-1), an entropy change with TDeltaS of +6.5 kcal.mol(-1), and an overall favorable free energy (DeltaG) of -8.2 kcal.mol(-1) .Through the temperature dependence of DeltaH, we obtained a heat capacity (DeltaC(p)) of -94 (+/- 5) cal.mol(-1).K(-1). The osmotic stress method revealed that there is an uptake of 13 water molecules in the complex relative to the free reactants. Furthermore, the molecular modeling studies on different quadruplex-berberine complexes show that berberine stacking at the external G-quartet is mainly aided by the pi-pi interaction and the stabilization of the high negative charge density of O6 of guanines by the positively charged N7 of berberine. The theoretical heat capacity (DeltaC(p)) values for quadruplex-berberine models are -89 and -156 cal.mol(-1).K(-1).  相似文献   

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