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1.
Mukaiyama A  Takano K  Haruki M  Morikawa M  Kanaya S 《Biochemistry》2004,43(43):13859-13866
Equilibrium and kinetic studies were carried out under denaturation conditions to clarify the energetic features of the high stability of a monomeric protein, ribonuclease HII, from a hyperthermophile, Thermococcus kodakaraensis (Tk-RNase HII). Guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl)-induced unfolding and refolding were measured with circular dichroism at 220 nm, and heat-induced denaturation was studied with differential scanning calorimetry. Both GdnHCl- and heat-induced denaturation are very reversible. It was difficult to obtain the equilibrated unfolding curve of Tk-RNase HII below 40 degrees C, because of the remarkably slow unfolding. The two-state unfolding and refolding reactions attained equilibrium at 50 degrees C after 2 weeks. The Gibbs energy change of GdnHCl-induced unfolding (DeltaG(H(2)O)) at 50 degrees C was 43.6 kJ mol(-1). The denaturation temperature in the DSC measurement shifted as a function of the scan rate; the denaturation temperature at a scan rate of 90 degrees C h(-1) was higher than at a scan rate of 5 degrees C h(-1). The unfolding and refolding kinetics of Tk-RNase HII were approximated as a first-order reaction. The ln k(u) and ln k(r) values depended linearly on the denaturant concentration between 10 and 50 degrees C. The DeltaG(H(2)O) value obtained from the rate constant in water using the two-state model at 50 degrees C, 44.5 kJ mol(-1), was coincident with that from the equilibrium study, 43.6 kJ mol(-1), suggesting the two-state folding of Tk-RNase HII. The values for the rate constant in water of the unfolding for Tk-RNase HII were much smaller than those of E. coli RNase HI and Thermus thermophilus RNase HI, which has a denaturation temperature similar to that of Tk-RNase HII. In contrast, little difference was observed in the refolding rates among these proteins. These results indicate that the stabilization mechanism of monomeric protein from a hyperthermophile, Tk-RNase HII, with reversible two-state folding is characterized by remarkably slow unfolding.  相似文献   

2.
We describe the guanidinium hydrochloride induced folding kinetics of the four-helix-bundle protein Rop wild-type (wt) under equilibrium conditions at three temperatures. The choice of appropriate denaturant conditions inside the transition range permitted, in combination with equilibrium transition curves, the determination of both unfolding and refolding rate constants. The ratio of the rate constants at zero denaturant concentration provided equilibrium constants and standard free energy changes that are in good agreement with values obtained in previous differential scanning calorimetry studies. The DeltaG0D values for 19, 25 and 40 degrees C calculated from the present kinetic studies are, respectively, 66.8, 70.8 and 57.2 kJ.mol-1. The unfolding reactions are extremely slow under these conditions. Equilibrium was reached only after 18, 12 and 6 days at 19, 25 and 40 degrees C. These results demonstrate that for Rop wt high stability correlates with slow folding kinetics.  相似文献   

3.
F Ahmad  P McPhie 《Biochemistry》1978,17(2):241-246
The denaturation of swine pepsinogen has been studied as a function of urea concentration, pH, and temperature. The unfolding of the protein by urea has been found to be fully reversible under different conditions of pH, temperature, and denaturant concentration. Kinetic experiments have shown that the transition shows two-state behavior at 25 degrees C in the pH range 6-8 covered in this study. Analysis of the equilibrium data obtained at 25 degrees C according to Tanford (Tanford, C. (1970), Adv. Protein Chem. 24, 1) and Pace (Pace, N.C. (1975), Crit. Rev. Biochem. 3, 1) leads to the conclusion that the free energy of stabilization of native pepsinogen, relative to the denatured state, under physiological conditions, is only 6-12 kcal mol-1. The temperature dependence of the equilibrium constant for the unfolding of pepsinogen by urea in the range 20-50 degrees C at pH 8.0 can be described by assigning the following values of thermodynamic parameters for the denaturation at 25 degrees C: deltaH=31.5 kcal mol-1; deltaS=105 cal deg-1 mol-1; and deltaCp=5215 cal deg-1 mol-1.  相似文献   

4.
The hydrogen-deuterium exchange kinetics of 37 backbone amide residues in RNase T1 have been monitored at 25, 40, 45, and 50 degrees C at pD 5.6 and at 40 and 45 degrees C at pD 6.6. The hydrogen exchange rate constants of the hydrogen-bonded residues varied over eight orders of magnitude at 25 degrees C with 13 residues showing exchange rates consistent with exchange occurring as a result of global unfolding. These residues are located in strands 2-4 of the central beta-pleated sheet. The residues located in the alpha-helix and the remaining strands of the beta-sheet exhibited exchange behaviors consistent with exchange occurring due to local structural fluctuations. For several residues at 25 degrees C, the global free energy change calculated from the hydrogen exchange data was over 2 kcal/mol greater than the free energy of unfolding determined from urea denaturation experiments. The number of residues showing this unexpected behavior was found to increase with temperature. This apparent inconsistency can be explained quantitatively if the cis-trans isomerization of the two cis prolines, Pro-39 and Pro-55, is taken into account. The cis-trans isomerization equilibrium calculated from kinetic data indicates the free energy of the unfolded state will be 2.6 kcal/mol higher at 25 degrees C when the two prolines are cis rather than trans (Mayr LM, Odefey CO, Schutkowski M, Schmid FX. 1996. Kinetic analysis of the unfolding and refolding of ribonuclease T1 by a stopped-flow double-mixing technique. Biochemistry 35: 5550-5561). The hydrogen exchange results are consistent with the most slowly exchanging hydrogens exchanging from a globally higher free energy unfolded state in which Pro-55 and Pro-39 are still predominantly in the cis conformation. When the conformational stabilities determined by hydrogen exchange are corrected for the proline isomerization equilibrium, the results are in excellent agreement with those from an analysis of urea denaturation curves.  相似文献   

5.
The denaturation of horse metmyoglobin by guanidine hydrochloride was studied at pH 6.4 and 25 degrees C. Measurements of both the peptide circular dichroism and the absorbance in the Soret region suggest that the extent of renaturation strongly depends on the time interval during which the protein is exposed to concentrated solutions of the denaturant. From the equilibrium measurements of the absorption in the Soret region, it is concluded that the unfolding of metmyoglobin is complex. This is further supported by kinetic studies of denaturation which suggest the occurrence of the least four species in the reaction.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics of the irreversible unfolding of glutathione reductase (NAD[P]H:GSSG oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.4.2.) from cyanobacterium Spirulina maxima was studied at pH 7.0 and room temperature. Denaturation was induced by guanidinium chloride and the changes in enzyme activity, aggregation state, and tertiary structure were monitored. No full reactivation of enzyme was obtained, even after very short incubation times in the presence of denaturant. Reactivation plots were complex, showing biphasic kinetics. A very fast early event in the denaturation pathway was the dissociation of tetrameric protein into reactivatable native-like dimers, followed by its conversion into a nonreactivatable intermediary, also dimeric. In the final step of the unfolding pathway the latter was dissociated into denatured monomers. Fluorescence measurements revealed that denaturation of S. maxima glutathione reductase is a slow process. Release of the prostethic group FAD was previous to the unfolding of the enzyme. No aggregated species were detected in the unfolding pathway, dismissing the aggregation of denatured polypeptide chains as the origin of irreversibility. Instead, the transition between the two dimeric intermediates is proposed as the cause of irreversibility in the denaturation of S. maxima glutathione reductase. A value of 106.6 +/- 3 kJ mol(-1) was obtained for the activation free energy of unfolding in the absence of denaturant. No evidence for the native monomer in the unfolding pathway was obtained which suggests that the dimeric nature of glutathione reductase is essential for the maintenance of the native subunit conformation.  相似文献   

7.
ORF56 is a plasmid-encoded protein from Sulfolobus islandicus, which probably controls the copy number of the pRN1 plasmid by binding to its own promotor. The protein showed an extremely high stability in denaturant, heat, and pH-induced unfolding transitions, which can be well described by a two-state reaction between native dimers and unfolded monomers. The homodimeric character of native ORF56 was confirmed by analytical ultracentrifugation. Far-UV circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy gave superimposable denaturant-induced unfolding transitions and the midpoints of both heat as well as denaturant-induced unfolding depend on the protein concentration supporting the two-state model. This model was confirmed by GdmSCN-induced unfolding monitored by heteronuclear 2D NMR spectroscopy. Chemical denaturation was accomplished by GdmCl and GdmSCN, revealing a Gibbs free energy of stabilization of -85.1 kJ/mol at 25 degrees C. Thermal unfolding was possible only above 1 M GdmCl, which shifted the melting temperature (t(m)) below the boiling point of water. Linear extrapolation of t(m) to 0 M GdmCl yielded a t(m) of 107.5 degrees C (5 microM monomer concentration). Additionally, ORF56 remains natively structured over a remarkable pH range from pH 2 to pH 12. Folding kinetics were followed by far-UV CD and fluorescence after either stopped-flow or manual mixing. All kinetic traces showed only a single phase and the two probes revealed coincident folding rates (k(f), k(u)), indicating the absence of intermediates. Apparent first-order refolding rates depend linearly on the protein concentration, whereas the unfolding rates do not. Both lnk(f) and lnk(u) depend linearly on the GdmCl concentration. Together, folding and association of homodimeric ORF56 are concurrent events. In the absence of denaturant ORF56 refolds fast (7.0 x 10(7)M(-1)s(-1)) and unfolds extremely slowly (5.7 year(-1)). Therefore, high stability is coupled to a slow unfolding rate, which is often observed for proteins of extremophilic organisms.  相似文献   

8.
Manyusa S  Mortuza G  Whitford D 《Biochemistry》1999,38(43):14352-14362
The guanidine hydrochloride- (GuHCl-) induced unfolding and refolding of a recombinant domain of bovine microsomal cytochrome b(5) containing the first 104 amino acid residues has been characterized by both transient and equilibrium spectrophotometric methods. The soluble domain is reversibly unfolded and the equilibrium reaction may be monitored by changes in absorbance and fluorescence that accompany denaturation of the native protein. Both probes reveal a single cooperative transition with a midpoint at 3 M GuHCl and lead to a value for the protein stability (DeltaG(uw)) of 26.5 kJ mol(-1). This stability is much higher than that reported for the corresponding form of the apoprotein (approximately 7 kJ mol(-1)). Transient changes in fluorescence and absorbance during protein unfolding exhibit biphasic profiles. A fast phase occupying approximately 30% of the total amplitude is observed at high denaturant concentrations and becomes the dominant process within the transition region. The rates associated with each process show a linear dependency on GuHCl concentration, and at zero denaturant concentration the unfolding rates (k(uw)) are 4.5 x 10(-5) s(-1) and 5.2 x 10(-6) s(-1) at 25 degrees C. The pattern of unfolding is not correlated with covalent heterogeneity, since a wide range of variants and site-directed mutants exhibit identical profiles, nor is the unfolding correlated with cis-trans Pro isomerization in the native state. In comparison with the apo form of cytochrome b(5), the kinetics of refolding and unfolding are more complex and exhibit very different transition states. The data support a model for unfolding in which heme-protein interactions give rise to two discernible rates of unfolding. From an analysis of the activation parameters associated with each process it is established that two structurally similar transition states differing by less than 5 kJ mol(-1) exist in the unfolding reaction. Protein refolding exhibits monophasic kinetics but with distinct curvature apparent in plots of ln k(obs) versus denaturant concentration. The data are interpreted in terms of alternative routes for protein folding in which a "fast track" leads to the rapid ordering of structure around Trp26 for refolding while a slower route requires additional reorganization around the hydrophobic core.  相似文献   

9.
We have used thermal and chemical denaturation to characterize the thermodynamics of unfolding for turkey ovomucoid third domain (OMTKY3). Thermal denaturation was monitored spectroscopically at a number of wave-lengths and data were subjected to van't Hoff analysis; at pH 2.0, the midpoint of denaturation (Tm) occurs at 58.6 +/- 0.4 degrees C and the enthalpy of unfolding at this temperature (delta Hm) is 40.8 +/- 0.3 kcal/mol. When Tm was perturbed by varying pH and denaturant concentration, the resulting plots of delta Hm versus Tm yield a mean value of 590 +/- 120 cal/(mol.K) for the change in heat capacity upon unfolding (delta Cp). A global fit of the same data to an equation that includes the temperature dependence for the enthalpy of unfolding yielded a value of 640 +/- 110 cal/(mol.K). We also performed a variation of the linear extrapolation method described by Pace and Laurents, which is an independent method for determining delta Cp (Pace, C.N. & Laurents, D., 1989, Biochemistry 28, 2520-2525). First, OMTKY3 was thermally denatured in the presence of a variety of denaturant concentrations. Linear extrapolations were then made from isothermal slices through the transition region of the denaturation curves. When extrapolated free energies of unfolding (delta Gu) were plotted versus temperature, the resulting curve appeared linear; therefore, delta Cp could not be determined. However, the data for delta Gu versus denaturant concentration are linear over an extraordinarily wide range of concentrations. Moreover, extrapolated values of delta Gu in urea are identical to values measured directly.  相似文献   

10.
The equilibrium unfolding of uracil DNA glycosylase inhibitor (Ugi), a small acidic protein of molecular mass 9474 Da, has been studied by a combination of thermal-induced and guanidine hydrochloride (GdnCl)-induced denaturation. The analysis of the denaturation data provides a measure of the changes in conformational free energy, enthalpy, entropy and heat capacity DeltaCp that accompany the equilibrium unfolding of Ugi over a wide range of temperature and GdnCl concentration. The unfolding of Ugi is a simple two-state, reversible process. The protein undergoes both low-temperature and high-temperature unfolding even in the absence of GdnCl but more so in the presence of denaturant. The data are consistent with the linear free-energy model and with a temperature independent DeltaCp over the large temperature range of unfolding. The small DeltaCp (6.52 kJ.mol-1.K-1) for the unfolding of Ugi, is perhaps a reflection of a relatively small, buried hydrophobic core in the folded form of this small monomeric protein. Despite a relatively low value of DeltaG(H2O), 7.40 kJ.mol-1 at pH 8.3, Ugi displays considerable stability with the temperature of maximum stability being 301.6 K.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The denaturation of the dimeric enzyme glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides by guanidine hydrochloride has been studied using enzymatic activity, intrinsic fluorescence, circular dichroism, and light scattering measurements. Equilibrium experiments at 25 degrees C revealed that between 0.9 and 1.2 M denaturant the enzyme underwent a conformational change, exposing tryptophan residues to solvent, with some loss of secondary structure and a complete loss of enzymatic activity but without dimer dissociation to subunits. This inactive, partially unfolded, dimeric intermediate was susceptible to slow aggregation, perhaps due to exposure of 'sticky' hydrophobic stretches of the polypeptide chain. A second equilibrium transition, reflecting extensive unfolding and dimer dissociation, occurred only at denaturant concentrations above 1.4 M. Kinetics experiments demonstrated that in the denaturant concentration range of 1.7-1.9 M the fluorescence change occurred in two distinct steps. The first step involved a large, very rapid drop in fluorescence whose rate was strongly dependent on the denaturant concentration. This was followed by a small, relatively slow rise in the emission intensity, the rate of which was independent of denaturant concentration. Enzymatic activity was lost with a denaturant-concentration-dependent rate, which was approx. 3-times slower than the rate of the first step in fluorescence change. A denaturation mechanism incorporating several unfolding intermediates and which accounts for all the above results is presented and discussed. While the fully unfolded enzyme regained up to 55% of its original activity upon dilution of denaturant to a concentration that would be expected to support native enzyme, denaturation intermediates were able to reactivate only minimally and in fact were found to aggregate and precipitate out of solution.  相似文献   

13.
An analysis of the folding of the 94 residue tenth fibronectin type III (fnIII) domain of human fibronectin (FNfn10) is presented. Use of guanidine isothiocyanate as a denaturant allows us to obtain equilibrium and kinetic data across a broad range of denaturant concentrations that are unavailable in guanidine hydrochloride. Equilibrium unfolding experiments show that FNfn10 is significantly more stable than has been reported previously. Comparison of equilibrium and kinetic parameters reveals the presence of an intermediate that accumulates at low denaturant concentrations. This is the first demonstration of three-state folding kinetics for a fnIII domain. We have previously shown that a homologous domain from human tenascin (TNfn3) folds by a two-state mechanism, but this does not necessarily indicate that the two proteins fold by different folding pathways.  相似文献   

14.
Denaturation of the protein phycocyanin in urea solution was investigated by microcalorimetry, ultraviolet and visible spectroscopy, circular dichroism and sedimentation equilibrium. The results consistently demonstrated that in the presence of 7 M urea this protein is completely denatured. By assumings a two-state mechanism, an apparent free energy of unfolding at zero denaturant concentration, (formula: see text) was found to be 4.4 kcal/mole at pH 6.0 and 25 degrees C. By microcalorimetry the enthalpy of denaturation of phycocyanin app was found to be -230 kcal/mole at 25 degrees C. The relatively large negative enthalpy change results from protein unfolding and changes in protein solvation.  相似文献   

15.
Cooperative unfolding of Escherichia coli ribosome recycling factor (RRF) and its implication for function were investigated by comparing the in vitro unfolding and the in vivo activity of wild-type E. coli RRF and its temperature-sensitive mutant RRF(V117D). The experiments show that mutation V117D at domain I could perturb the domain II structure as evidenced in the near-UV CD and tyrosine fluorescence spectra though no significant globular conformation change occurred. Both equilibrium unfolding induced by heat or denaturant and kinetic unfolding induced by denaturant obey the two-state transition model, indicating V117D mutation does not perturb the efficient interdomain interaction, which results in cooperative unfolding of the RRF protein. However, the mutation significantly destabilizes the E. coli RRF protein, moving the thermal unfolding transition temperature range from 50-65 to 35-50 degrees C, which spans the non-permissive temperature for the growth of E. coli LJ14 strain (frr(ts)). The in vivo activity assays showed that although V117D mutation results in a temperature sensitive phenotype of E. coli LJ14 strain (frr(ts)), over-expression of mutant RRF(V117D) can eliminate the temperature sensitive phenotype at the non-permissive temperature (42 degrees C). Taking all the results into consideration, it can be suggested that the mechanism of the temperature sensitive phenotype of the E. coli LJ14 cells is due to inactivation of mutant RRF(V117D) caused by unfolding at the non-permissive temperatures.  相似文献   

16.
To search for folding intermediates, we have examined the folding and unfolding kinetics of wild-type barnase and four representative mutants under a wide range of conditions that span two-state and multi-state kinetics. The choice of mutants and conditions provided in-built controls for artifacts that might distort the interpretation of kinetics, such as the non-linearity of kinetic and equilibrium data with concentration of denaturant. We measured unfolding rate constants over a complete range of denaturant concentration by using by 1H/2H-exchange kinetics under conditions that favour folding, conventional stopped-flow methods at higher denaturant concentrations and continuous flow. Under conditions that favour multi-state kinetics, plots of the rate constants for unfolding against denaturant concentration fitted quantitatively to the equation for three-state kinetics, with a sigmoid component for a change of rate determining step, as did the refolding kinetics. The position of the transition state on the reaction pathway, as measured by solvent exposure (the Tanford beta value) also moved with denaturant concentration, fitting quantitatively to the same equations with a change of rate determining step. The sigmoid behaviour disappeared under conditions that favoured two-state kinetics. Those data combined with direct structural observations and simulation support a minimal reaction pathway for the folding of barnase that involves two detectable folding intermediates. The first intermediate, I(1), is the denatured state under physiological conditions, D(Phys), which has native-like topology, is lower in energy than the random-flight denatured state U and is suggested by molecular dynamics simulation of unfolding to be on-pathway. The second intermediate, I(2), is high energy, and is proven by the change in rate determining step in the unfolding kinetics to be on-pathway. The change in rate determining step in unfolding with structure or environment reflects the change in partitioning of this intermediate to products or starting materials.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Extensive measurements and analysis of thermodynamic stability and kinetics of urea-induced unfolding and folding of hisactophilin are reported for 5-50 degrees C, at pH 6.7. Under these conditions hisactophilin has moderate thermodynamic stability, and equilibrium and kinetic data are well fit by a two-state transition between the native and the denatured states. Equilibrium and kinetic m values decrease with increasing temperature, and decrease with increasing denaturant concentration. The betaF values at different temperatures and urea concentrations are quite constant, however, at about 0.7. This suggests that the transition state for hisactophilin unfolding is native-like and changes little with changing solution conditions, consistent with a narrow free energy profile for the transition state. The activation enthalpy and entropy of unfolding are unusually low for hisactophilin, as is also the case for the corresponding equilibrium parameters. Conventional Arrhenius and Eyring plots for both folding and unfolding are markedly non-linear, but these plots become linear for constant DeltaG/T contours. The Gibbs free energy changes for structural changes in hisactophilin have a non-linear denaturant dependence that is comparable to non-linearities observed for many other proteins. These non-linearities can be fit for many proteins using a variation of the Tanford model, incorporating empirical quadratic denaturant dependencies for Gibbs free energies of transfer of amino acid constituents from water to urea, and changes in fractional solvent accessible surface area of protein constituents based on the known protein structures. Noteworthy exceptions that are not well fit include amyloidogenic proteins and large proteins, which may form intermediates. The model is easily implemented and should be widely applicable to analysis of urea-induced structural transitions in proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Proteins folding according to a classical two-state system characteristically show V-shaped chevron plots. We have previously interpreted the symmetrically curved chevron plot of the protein U1A as denaturant-dependent movements in the position of the transition state ensemble (TSE). S6, a structural analog of U1A, shows a classical V-shaped chevron plot indicative of straightforward two-state kinetics, but the mutant LA30 has a curved unfolding limb, which is most consistent with TSE mobility. The kinetic m-values (derivatives of the rate constants with respect to denaturant concentration) in themselves depend on denaturant concentration. To obtain complementary information about putative mobile TSEs, we have carried out a thermodynamic analysis of the three proteins, based on data for refolding and unfolding over the range 10 degrees C to 70 degrees C. The data at all temperatures can be fitted to two-state model systems. Importantly, for all three proteins the activation heat capacities are, within error, identical to the heat capacities measured in independent experiments under equilibrium conditions. Although the equilibrium heat capacities are essentially invariant with regard to denaturant concentration, the activation heat capacities, similar to the structurally equivalent kinetic m-values, show marked denaturant dependence. Furthermore, the values of beta++ at different denaturant concentrations measured by m-values and by heat capacity values are very similar. These observations are consistent with significant transition state movements within the framework of two-state folding. The basis for TSE movement appears to be enthalpic rather than entropic, suggesting that the binding energy of denaturant-protein interactions is a major determinant of the response of energy landscape contours to changing environments.  相似文献   

20.
The unfolding and inhibition study of mushroom tyrosinase have been studied in the presence of different denaturants such as sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl), and urea. The kinetic two-phase rate constants were commonly measured from semilogarithmic plots of the activity versus time, which resolved into two straight lines, indicating that the inactivation process consisted of fast and slow phases as a first-order reaction. This result also implied that transient partially folded intermediate existed during tyrosinase unfolding pathway. Mushroom tyrosinase had different behaviors to denaturants in regard with: noncooperative binding manner by SDS while cooperative interactions by GdnHCl and urea; in equilibrium state, SDS-micelle never completely inactivated enzyme activity while GdnHCl has single step denaturation and urea induced a typical transition-like process. Various kinetic parameters for each denaturant were calculated and the possible unfolding pathway scheme was discussed.  相似文献   

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