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1.
The urea-induced unfolding of a missense mutant of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli involving the replacement of Gly by Glu at position 211 has been monitored by absorbance changes at 286 nm. Like the wild-type protein, the equilibrium unfolding curve demonstrates the presence of one or more stable intermediates. Comparison of these results with those from the wild-type alpha subunit [Matthews, C. R., & Crisanti, M. M. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 784] shows that the transition from the native conformation to the stable intermediates is displaced to higher urea concentration in the mutant alpha subunit; however, the transition from the intermediates to the unfolded form is unaffected. Kinetic studies show that the amino acid replacement slows the rate of unfolding by an order of magnitude. The effect on refolding rates is complex. One phase, previously assigned to proline isomerization [Crisanti, M. M., & Matthews, C. R. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 2700], is unaffected by the substitution. The rate of the second phase, which is urea dependent down to about 1 M urea, is slower than the corresponding phase in the wild-type protein by approximately a factor of 2. Below about 1 M urea, the rate of this phase becomes urea independent and identical with that of the wild-type alpha subunit. This change in urea dependence has been ascribed to a change in the nature of the rate-limiting step for this process from one involving folding to one involving proline isomerization. The results support the folding model for the alpha subunit proposed previously [Matthews, C. R., & Crisanti, M. M. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 784] and clarify the role of proline isomerization in limiting the rate of folding.  相似文献   

2.
J A Zitzewitz  C R Matthews 《Biochemistry》1999,38(31):10205-10214
The alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase (alphaTS) from Escherichia coli is a 268-residue 8-stranded beta/alpha barrel protein. Two autonomous folding units, comprising the first six strands (residues 1-188) and the last two strands (residues 189-268), have been previously identified in this single structural domain protein by tryptic digestion [Higgins, W., Fairwell, T., and Miles, E. W. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 4827-4835]. The larger, amino-terminal fragment, alphaTS(1-188), was overexpressed and independently purified, and its equilibrium and kinetic folding properties were studied by absorbance, fluorescence, and near- and far-UV circular dichroism spectroscopies. The native state of the fragment unfolds cooperatively in an apparent two-state transition with a stability of 3.98 +/- 0.19 kcal mol(-1) in the absence of denaturant and a corresponding m value of 1.07 +/- 0.05 kcal mol(-1) M(-1). Similar to the full-length protein, the unfolding of the fragment shows two kinetic phases which arise from the presence of two discrete native state populations. Additionally, the fragment exhibits a significant burst phase in unfolding, indicating that a fraction of the folded state ensemble under native conditions has properties similar to those of the equilibrium intermediate populated at 3 M urea in full-length alphaTS. Refolding of alphaTS(1-188) is also complex, exhibiting two detectable kinetic phases and a burst phase that is complete within 5 ms. The two slowest isomerization phases observed in the refolding of the full-length protein are absent in the fragment, suggesting that these phases reflect contributions from the carboxy-terminal segment. The folding mechanism of alphaTS(1-188) appears to be a simplified version of the mechanism for the full-length protein [Bilsel, O., Zitzewitz, J. A., Bowers, K.E, and Matthews, C. R.(1999) Biochemistry 38, 1018-1029]. Four parallel channels in the full-length protein are reduced to a pair of channels that most likely reflect a cis/trans proline isomerization reaction in the amino-terminal fragment. The off- and on-pathway intermediates that exist for both full-length alphaTS and alphaTS(1-188) may reflect the preponderance of local interactions in the beta/alpha barrel motif.  相似文献   

3.
Equilibrium and kinetic studies on the folding of a series of amino acid replacements at position 211 in the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli were performed in order to determine the role of this position in the rate-limiting step in folding. Previous studies [Beasty, A. M., Hurle, M. R., Manz, J. T., Stackhouse, T., Onuffer, J. J., & Matthews, C. R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 2965-2974] have shown that the rate-limiting step corresponds to the association/dissociation of the amino (residues 1-188) and carboxy (residues 189-268) folding units. In terms of the secondary structure, the amino folding unit consists of the first six strands and five alpha helices of this alpha/beta barrel protein. The carboxy folding unit comprises the remaining two strands and three alpha helices; position 211 is in strand 7. Replacement of the wild-type glycine at position 211 with serine, valine, and tryptophan at most alters the rate of dissociation of the folding units; association is not changed significantly. In contrast, glutamic acid and arginine dramatically decelerate and accelerate, respectively, both association and dissociation. The difference in effects is attributed to long-range electrostatic interactions for these charged side chains; steric effects and/or hydrogen bonding play lesser roles. When considered with previous data on replacements at other positions in the alpha subunit [Hurle, M. R., Tweedy, N. B., & Matthews, C. R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 6356-6360], it is clear that beta strands 6 (in the amino folding unit) and 7 (in the carboxy folding unit and containing position 211) dock late in the folding process.  相似文献   

4.
Studies on the folding kinetics of the Notch ankyrin domain have demonstrated that the major refolding phase is slow, the minor refolding phase is limited by the isomerization of prolyl peptide bonds, and that unfolding is multiexponential. Here, we explore the relationship between prolyl isomerization and folding heterogeneity using a combination of experiment and simulation. Proline residues were replaced with alanine, both singly and in various combinations. These destabilizing substitutions combine to eliminate the minor refolding phase, although unfolding heterogeneity persists even when all seven proline residues are replaced. To test whether prolyl isomerization influences the major refolding phase, we modeled folding and prolyl isomerization as a system of sequential reactions. Simulations that use rate constants of the major folding phase of the Notch ankyrin domain to represent intrinsic folding indicate that even with seven prolyl isomerization reactions, only two significant phases should be observed, and that the fast observed phase provides a good approximation of the intrinsic folding in the absence of prolyl isomerization. These results indicate that the major refolding phase of the Notch ankyrin domain reflects an intrinsically slow folding transition, rather than coupling of fast folding events with slow prolyl isomerization steps. This is consistent with the observation that the single observed refolding phase of a construct in which all proline residues are replaced remains slow. Finally, the simulation fails to produce a second unfolding phase at high urea concentrations, indicating that prolyl isomerization does not play a role in the three-state mechanism that leads to this heterogeneity.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetic folding mechanism for the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase (alphaTS) from Escherichia coli involves four parallel channels whose inter-conversions are controlled by three cis/trans prolyl isomerization reactions (tau(1), tau(2) and tau(3)). A previous mutational analysis of all 19 proline positions, including the unique cis Asp27-Pro28 peptide bond, revealed that the G(3)P28G, P78A or P96A mutations selectively eliminated the fast, tau(1) (ten seconds), folding phase, while the P217M and P261A mutations eliminated the medium, tau(2) (40 seconds) and the slow, tau(3) ( approximately 300 seconds) folding phases, respectively. To further elucidate the role of these proline residues and to simplify the folding mechanism, a series of double and triple mutants were constructed at these critical positions, and comprehensive kinetic and thermodynamic experiments were performed. Although it was not possible to construct a stable system that was free of proline isomerization constraints, a double mutant variant, G(3)P28G/P217M, in which the refolding of more than 90% of the unfolded protein is not limited by proline isomerization reactions was identified. Further, long-range interactions between several of these residues appear to be a crucial part of the cooperative network of structure that stabilizes the TIM barrel motif for alphaTS.  相似文献   

6.
Porcine heart cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase (s-MDH) is a dimeric protein (2 x 35 kDa). We have studied equilibrium unfolding and refolding of s-MDH using activity assay, fluorescence, far-UV and near-UV circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, hydrophobic probe-1-anilino-8-napthalene sulfonic acid binding, dynamic light scattering, and chromatographic (HPLC) techniques. The unfolding and refolding transitions are reversible and show the presence of two equilibrium intermediate states. The first one is a compact monomer (MC) formed immediately after subunit dissociation and the second one is an expanded monomer (ME), which is little less compact than the native monomer and has most of the characteristic features of a 'molten globule' state. The equilibrium transition is fitted in the model: 2U <--> 2M(E) <--> 2M(C) <--> D. The time course of kinetics of self- refolding of s-MDH revealed two parallel folding pathways [Rudolph, R., Fuchs, I. & Jaenicke, R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 1662-1669]. The major pathway (70%) is 2U-->2M*-->2M-->D, the rate limiting step being the isomerization of the monomers (K1 = 1.7 x 10(-3) s(-1)). The minor pathway (30%) involves an association step leading to the incorrectly folding dimers, prior to the very slow D*-->D folding step. In this study, we have characterized the folding-assembly pathway of dimeric s-MDH. Our kinetic and equilibrium experiments indicate that the folding of s-MDH involves the formation of two folding intermediates. However, whether the equilibrium intermediates are equivalent to the kinetic ones is beyond the scope of this study.  相似文献   

7.
The role of the secondary structure in the folding mechanism of dihydrofolate reductase from Escherichia coli was probed by studying the effects of amino acid replacements in two alpha helices and two strands of the central beta sheet on the folding and stability. The effects on stability could be qualitatively understood in terms of the X-ray structure for the wild-type protein by invoking electrostatic, hydrophobic, or hydrogen-bonding interactions. Kinetic studies focused on the two slow reactions that are thought to reflect the unfolding/refolding of two stable native conformers to/from their respective folding intermediates [Touchette, N. A., Perry, K. M., & Matthews, C. R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 5445-5452]. Replacements at three different positions in helix alpha B selectively alter the relaxation time for unfolding while a single replacement in helix alpha C selectively alters the relaxation time for refolding. This behavior is characteristic of mutations that change the stability of the protein but do not affect the rate-limiting step. In striking contrast, replacements in strands beta F and beta G can affect both unfolding and refolding relaxation times. This behavior shows that these mutations alter the rate-limiting step in these native-to-intermediate folding reactions. It is proposed that the intermediates have an incorrectly formed beta sheet whose maturation to the structure found in the native conformation is one of the slow steps in folding.  相似文献   

8.
Slow refolding kinetics in yeast iso-2 cytochrome c   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
J J Osterhout  B T Nall 《Biochemistry》1985,24(27):7999-8005
  相似文献   

9.
The equilibrium and kinetic properties for the urea-induced unfolding of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhimurium, and five interspecies hybrids were compared to determine the role of protein folding in evolution. The parent proteins differ at 40 positions in the sequence of 268 amino acids, and the hybrids differ by up to 15 amino acids from the Escherichia coli alpha subunit. The results show that all the proteins follow the same folding mechanism and are consistent with a previously proposed hypothesis [Hollecker, M., & Creighton, T. E. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 168, 409; Krebs, H., Schmid, F. X., & Jaenicke, R. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 169, 619] that the folding mechanisms are conserved in homologous proteins. Analysis of the kinetic data suggests that the 15 positions at which the parent proteins differ in the amino folding unit, residues 1-188, do not play a role in a rate-limiting step in folding that has been previously identified as the association of the amino and carboxyl folding units [Beasty, A. M., Hurle, M. R., Manz, J. T., Stackhouse, T. S., Onuffer, J. J., & Matthews, C. R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 2965]. One or more of the 25 positions at which the parent proteins differ in the carboxyl folding unit, residues 189-268, do appear to play a role in this same rate-limiting step.  相似文献   

10.
F X Schmid 《FEBS letters》1986,198(2):217-220
The trans----cis isomerization of Pro 93 was measured during refolding of bovine ribonuclease A. This isomerization is slow (tau = 500 s) under marginally stable folding conditions of 2.0 M GdmCl, pH 6, at 10 degrees C. However, it is strongly accelerated (tau = 100 s) in samples which, prior to isomerization, had been converted to a folding intermediate by a 15 s refolding pulse under strongly native conditions (0.8 M ammonium sulfate, 0 degree C). The results demonstrate that extensive folding is possible before Pro 93 isomerizes to its native cis state and that the presence of structural folding intermediates leads to a marked increase in the rate of subsequent proline isomerization.  相似文献   

11.
Unfolding and refolding kinetics of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase were studied by following the time-dependent changes of two signals: the ellipticity at 218 nm and 222 nm, and the fluorescence emission at 330 nm (following excitation at 295 nm). The protein is composed of two similar-sized structural domains. Each domain has been produced by recombinant DNA techniques. It has been previously demonstrated that the engineered isolated domains are able to fold into a quasinative structure (Minard, P., et al., 1989b, Protein Eng. 3, 55-60; Missiakas, D., Betton, J.M., Minard, P., & Yon, J.M., 1990, Biochemistry 29, 8683-8689). The behavior of the isolated domains was studied using the same two conformational probes as for the whole enzyme. We found that the refolding kinetics of each domain are multiphasic. In the whole protein, domain folding and pairing appeared to be simultaneous events. However, it was found that some refolding steps occurring during the refolding of the isolated C-domain are masked during the refolding of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase. The N-domain was also found to refold faster when it was isolated than when integrated.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of four single amino acid replacements on the stability and folding of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli have been investigated by ultraviolet differences spectroscopy. In previous studies [Miles, E. W., Yutani, K., & Ogasahara, K. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 2586], it had been shown that the urea-induced unfolding at pH 7.8, 25 degrees C, proceeds by the initial unfolding of the less stable carboxyl domain (residues 189-268) followed by the unfolding of the more stable amino domain (residues 1-188). The effects of the Phe-22----Leu, Glu-49----Met, Gly-234----Asp, and Gly-234----Lys mutants on the equilibrium unfolding process can all be understood in terms of the domain unfolding model. With the exception of the Glu-49----Met replacement, the effects on stability are small. In contrast, the effects of three of the four mutations on the kinetics of interconversion of the native form and one of the stable partially folded intermediates are dramatic. The results for the Phe-22----Leu and Gly-234----Asp mutations indicate that these residues play a key role in the rate-limiting step. The Glu-49----Met mutation increases the stability of the native form with respect to that of the intermediate but does not affect the rate-limiting step. The Gly-234----Lys mutation does not affect either the stability or the kinetics of folding for the transition between native and intermediate forms. The changes in stability calculated from the unfolding and refolding rate constants agree quantitatively with those obtained from the equilibrium data. When considered with the results from a previous study on the Gly-211----Glu replacement [Matthews, C. R., Crisanti, M. M., Manz, J. T., & Gepner G. L. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 1445], it can be concluded that the rate-limiting step in the conversion of the intermediate to the native conformation involves either domain association or some other type of molecule-wide phenomenon.  相似文献   

13.
Site-directed mutagenesis has frequently been used to replace proline with other amino acids in order to determine if proline isomerization is responsible for a slow phase during refolding. Replacement of Pro 85 with alanine in cellular retinoic acid binding protein I (CRABP-I) abolished the slowest refolding phase, suggesting that this phase is due to proline isomerization in the unfolded state. To further test this assumption, we mutated Pro 85 to valine, which is the conservative replacement in the two most closely related proteins in the family (cellular retinoic acid binding protein II and cellular retinol binding protein I). The mutant protein was about 1 kcal/mole more stable than wild type. Retinoic acid bound equally well to wild type and P85V-CRABP I, confirming the functional integrity of this mutation. The refolding and unfolding kinetics of the wild-type and mutant proteins were characterized by stopped flow fluorescence and circular dichroism. The mutant P85V protein refolded with three kinetic transitions, the same number as wild-type protein. This result conflicts with the P85A mutant, which lost the slowest refolding rate. The P85V mutation also lacked a kinetic unfolding intermediate found for wild-type protein. These data suggest that proline isomerization may not be responsible for the slowest folding phase of CRABP I. As such, the loss of a slow refolding phase upon mutation of a proline residue may not be diagnostic for proline isomerization effects on protein folding.  相似文献   

14.
Noland BW  Baldwin TO 《Biochemistry》2003,42(10):3105-3112
The alpha subunit of bacterial luciferase unfolds and refolds reversibly by a three-state mechanism in urea-containing buffer. It has been proposed that the three-state unfolding of the alpha subunit arises from a stepwise unfolding of a C-terminal folding domain at lower concentrations of urea, followed by unfolding of the N-terminal domain at higher concentrations of urea (Noland, B. W., Dangott, L. J., and Baldwin, T. O. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 16136-16145). The location of an anion binding site in the proposed N-terminal folding domain allowed the folding mechanism to be probed in the context of the intact polypeptide. Anions preferentially stabilized the N-terminal domain in a concentration-dependent manner. The polyvalent anions sulfate and phosphate were found to be more stabilizing than monovalent chloride ion. Cations did not show a similar stabilizing effect, demonstrating that the stabilization was due to the anions alone. The purified N-terminal domain prepared by limited proteolysis and anion exchange chromatography was found to refold cooperatively with a midpoint approximately that of the second unfolding transition of the alpha subunit. Phosphate ion stabilized this fragment to roughly the same extent as it did the alpha subunit. The results presented are consistent with the proposed two-domain folding model and demonstrate that anion binding to the N-terminal folding domain stabilizes the alpha subunit of bacterial luciferase.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of His-heme misligation on folding has been investigated for a triple mutant of yeast iso-2 cytochrome c (N26H,H33N,H39K iso-2). The variant contains a single misligating His residue at position 26, a location at which His residues are found in several cytochrome c homologues, including horse, tuna, and yeast iso-1. The amplitude for fast phase folding exhibits a strong initial pH dependence. For GdnHCl unfolded protein at an initial pH<5, the observed refolding at final pH 6 is dominated by a fast phase (tau(2f)=20 ms, alpha(2f)=90 %) that represents folding in the absence of misligation. For unfolded protein at initial pH 6, folding at final pH 6 occurs in a fast phase of reduced amplitude (alpha(2f) approximately 20 %) but the same rate (tau(2f)=20 ms), and in two slower phases (tau(m)=6-8 seconds, alpha(m) approximately 45 %; and tau(1b)=16-20 seconds, alpha(1b) approximately 35 %). Double jump experiments show that the initial pH dependence of the folding amplitudes results from a slow pH-dependent equilibrium between fast and slow folding species present in the unfolded protein. The slow equilibrium arises from coupling of the His protonation equilibrium to His-heme misligation and proline isomerization. Specifically, Pro25 is predominantly in trans in the unligated low-pH unfolded protein, but is constrained in a non-native cis isomerization state by His26-heme misligation near neutral pH. Refolding from the misligated unfolded form proceeds slowly due to the large energetic barrier required for proline isomerization and displacement of the misligated His26-heme ligand.  相似文献   

16.
Mutants of the dimeric Escherichia coli trp aporepressor are constructed by replacement of the two tryptophan residues in each subunit in order to assess the effects on equilibrium and kinetic fluorescence properties of the folding reaction. The three kinetic phases detected by intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence in refolding of the wild-type aporepressor are also observed in folding of both Trp 19 to Phe and Trp 99 to Phe single mutants, demonstrating that these phases correspond to global rather than local conformational changes. Comparison of equilibrium fluorescence (Royer, C.A., Mann, C.J., & Matthews, C.R., 1993, Protein Sci. 2, 1844-1852) and circular dichroism transition curves induced by urea shows that replacement of either Trp 19 or Trp 99 results in noncoincident behavior. Unlike the wild-type protein (Gittelman, M.S. & Matthews, C.R., 1990, Biochemistry 29, 7011-7020), tertiary and/or quaternary structures are disrupted at lower denaturant concentration than is secondary structure. The equilibrium results can be interpreted in terms of enhancement in the population of a monomeric folding intermediate in which the lone tryptophan residue is highly exposed to solvent, but in which substantial secondary structure is retained. The location of both mutations at the interface between the two subunits (Zhang, R.G., et al., 1987, Nature 327, 591-597) provides a simple explanation for this phenomenon.  相似文献   

17.
Nature of the fast and slow refolding reactions of iron(III) cytochrome c   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The fast and slow refolding reactions of iron(III) cytochrome c (Fe(III) cyt c), previously studied by Ikai et al. (Ikai, A., Fish, W. W., & Tanford, C. (1973) J. Mol. Biol. 73, 165--184), have been reinvestigated. The fast reaction has the major amplitude (78%) and is 100-fold faster than the slow reaction in these conditions (pH 7.2, 25 degrees C, 1.75 M guanidine hydrochloride). We show here that native cyt c is the product formed in the fast reaction as well as in the slow reaction. Two probes have been used to test for formation of native cyt c. absorbance in the 695-nm band and rate of reduction of by L-ascorbate. Different unfolded species (UF, US) give rise to the fast and slow refolding reactions, as shown both by refolding assays at different times after unfolding ("double-jump" experiments) and by the formation of native cyt c in each of the fast and slow refolding reactions. Thus the fast refolding reaction is UF leads to N and the slow refolding reaction is Us leads to N, where N is native cyt c, and there is a US in equilibrium UF equilibrium in unfolded cyt c. The results are consistent with the UF in equilibrium US reaction being proline isomerization, but this has not yet been tested in detail. Folding intermediates have been detected in both reactions. In the UF leads to N reaction, the Soret absorbance change precedes the recovery of the native 695-nm band spectrum, showing that Soret absorbance monitors the formation of a folding intermediate. In the US leads to N reaction an ascorbate-reducible intermediate has been found at an early stage in folding and the Soret absorbance change occurs together with the change at 695 nm as N is formed in the final stage of folding.  相似文献   

18.
Bann JG  Frieden C 《Biochemistry》2004,43(43):13775-13786
The folding of the two-domain bacterial chaperone PapD has been studied to develop an understanding of the relationship between individual domain folding and the formation of domain-domain interactions. PapD contains six phenylalanine residues, four in the N-terminal domain and two in the C-terminal domain. To examine the folding properties of PapD, the protein was both uniformly and site-specifically labeled with p-fluoro-phenylalanine ((19)F-Phe) for (19)F NMR studies, in conjunction with those of circular dichroism and fluorescence. In equilibrium denaturation experiments monitored by (19)F NMR, the loss of (19)F-Phe native intensity for both the N- and C-terminal domains shows the same dependence on urea concentration. For the N-terminal domain the loss of native intensity is mirrored by the appearance of separate denatured resonances. For the C-terminal domain, which contains residues Phe 168 and Phe 205, intermediate as well as denatured resonances appear. These intermediate resonances persist at denaturant concentrations well beyond the loss of native resonance intensity and appear in kinetic refolding (19)F NMR experiments. In double-jump (19)F NMR experiments in which proline isomerization does not affect the refolding kinetics, the formation of domain-domain interactions is fast if the protein is denatured for only a short time. However, with increasing time of denaturation the native intensities of the N- and C-terminal domains decrease, and the denatured resonances of the N-terminal domain and the intermediate resonances of the C-terminal domain accumulate. The rate of loss of the N-terminal domain resonances is consistent with a cis to trans isomerization process, indicating that from an equilibrium denatured state the slow refolding of PapD is due to the trans to cis isomerization of one or both of the N-terminal cis proline residues. The data indicate that both the N- and C-terminal domains must fold into a native conformation prior to the formation of domain-domain interactions.  相似文献   

19.
The human AmphyphisinII/Bin1 N-BAR domain belongs to the BAR domain superfamily, whose members sense and generate membrane curvatures. The N-BAR domain is a 57 kDa homodimeric protein comprising a six helix bundle. Here we report the protein folding mechanism of this protein as a representative of this protein superfamily. The concentration dependent thermodynamic stability was studied by urea equilibrium transition curves followed by fluorescence and far-UV CD spectroscopy. Kinetic unfolding and refolding experiments, including rapid double and triple mixing techniques, allowed to unravel the complex folding behavior of N-BAR. The equilibrium unfolding transition curve can be described by a two-state process, while the folding kinetics show four refolding phases, an additional burst reaction and two unfolding phases. All fast refolding phases show a rollover in the chevron plot but only one of these phases depends on the protein concentration reporting the dimerization step. Secondary structure formation occurs during the three fast refolding phases. The slowest phase can be assigned to a proline isomerization. All kinetic experiments were also followed by fluorescence anisotropy detection to verify the assignment of the dimerization step to the respective folding phase. Based on these experiments we propose for N-BAR two parallel folding pathways towards the homodimeric native state depending on the proline conformation in the unfolded state.  相似文献   

20.
L.-N. Lin and J.F. Brandts recently proposed a simple model for the folding kinetics of ribonuclease A in which folding intermediates are not detectable. We have tested the basic assumption of the simple model for the major unfolded species, which is produced by a slow isomerization (the "X in equilibrium Y reaction" according to Lin and Brandts) after unfolding. The simple model assumes that in refolding the slow Y----X reaction must occur before any folding can take place. We have measured the Y----X reaction during folding. Tyrosine-detected folding occurs before the Y----X reaction; the difference in rate between the Y----X reaction and folding monitored by tyrosine absorbance becomes large when the stabilizing salt 0.56 M (NH4)2SO4 is added. The simple model predicts that the kinetic properties of the X in equilibrium Y reaction in unfolded ribonuclease are the same as those of tyrosine-detected folding. We find, however, that the kinetics of the X in equilibrium Y reaction in unfolded ribonuclease are independent of urea concentration, whereas the rate of tyrosine-detected folding decreases almost 100-fold between 0.3 and 5 M urea, as reported by Lin and Brandts. We point out that the kinetic properties of the X in equilibrium Y reaction in unfolded ribonuclease are characteristic of proline isomerization.  相似文献   

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