首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Apomyoglobin folds by a sequential mechanism in which the A, G, and H helix regions undergo rapid collapse to form a compact intermediate onto which the central portion of the B helix subsequently docks. To investigate the factors that frustrate folding, we have made mutations in the N-terminus of the B helix to stabilize helical structure (in the mutant G23A/G25A) and to promote native-like hydrophobic packing interactions with helix G (in the mutant H24L/H119F). The kinetic and equilibrium intermediates of G23A/G25A and H24L/H119F were studied by hydrogen exchange pulse labeling and interrupted hydrogen/deuterium exchange combined with NMR. For both mutants, stabilization of helical structure in the N-terminal region of the B helix is confirmed by increased exchange protection in the equilibrium molten globule states near pH 4. Increased protection is also observed in the GH turn region in the G23A/G25A mutant, suggesting that stabilization of the B helix facilitates native-like interactions with the C-terminal region of helix G. These interactions are further enhanced in H24L/H119F. The kinetic burst phase intermediates of both mutants show increased protection, relative to wild-type protein, of amides in the N-terminus of the B helix and in part of the E helix. Stabilization of the E helix in the intermediate is attributed to direct interactions between E helix residues and the newly stabilized N-terminus of helix B. Stabilization of native packing between the B and G helices in H24L/H119F also favors formation of native-like interactions in the GH turn and between the G and H helices in the ensemble of burst phase intermediates. We conclude that instability at the N-terminus of the B helix of apomyoglobin contributes to the energetic frustration of folding by preventing docking and stabilization of the E helix.  相似文献   

2.
An important question in protein folding is whether molten globule states formed under equilibrium conditions are good structural models for kinetic folding intermediates. The structures of the kinetic and equilibrium intermediates in the folding of the plant globin apoleghemoglobin have been compared at high resolution by quench-flow pH-pulse labeling and interrupted hydrogen/deuterium exchange analyzed in dimethyl sulfoxide. Unlike its well studied homolog apomyoglobin, where the equilibrium and kinetic intermediates are quite similar, there are striking structural differences between the intermediates formed by apoleghemoglobin. In the kinetic intermediate, formed during the burst phase of the quench-flow experiment, protected amides and helical structure are found mainly in the regions corresponding to the G and H helices of the folded protein, and in parts of the E helix and CE loop regions, whereas in the equilibrium intermediate, amide protection and helical structure are seen in parts of the A and B helix regions, as well as in the G and H regions, and the E helix remains largely unfolded. These results suggest that the structure of the molten globule intermediate of apoleghemoglobin is more plastic than that of apomyoglobin, so that it is readily transformed depending on the solution conditions, particularly pH. Thus, in the case of apoleghemoglobin at least, the equilibrium molten globule formed under destabilizing conditions at acid pH is not a good model for the compact intermediate formed during kinetic refolding experiments. Our high-precision kinetic analysis also reveals an additional slow phase during the folding of apoleghemoglobin, which is not observed for apomyoglobin. Hydrogen exchange pulse-labeling experiments show that the slow-folding phase is associated with residues in the CE loop, which probably forms non-native structure in the intermediate that must be resolved before folding can proceed to completion.  相似文献   

3.
To test the hypothesis that the folding pathways of evolutionarily related proteins with similar three-dimensional structures but widely different sequences should be similar, the folding pathway of apoleghemoglobin has been characterized using stopped-flow circular dichroism, heteronuclear NMR pulse labeling techniques and mass spectrometry. The pathway of folding was found to differ significantly from that of a protein of the same family, apomyoglobin, although both proteins appear to fold through helical burst phase intermediates. For leghemoglobin, the burst phase intermediate exhibits stable helical structure in the G and H helices, together with a small region in the center of the E helix. The A and B helices are not stabilized until later stages of the folding process. The structure of the burst phase folding intermediate thus differs from that of apomyoglobin, in which stable helical structure is formed in the A, B, G and H helix regions.  相似文献   

4.
Kinetic and equilibrium studies of apomyoglobin folding pathways and intermediates have provided important insights into the mechanism of protein folding. To investigate the role of intrinsic helical propensities in the apomyoglobin folding process, a mutant has been prepared in which Asn132 and Glu136 have been substituted with glycine to destabilize the H helix. The structure and dynamics of the equilibrium molten globule state formed at pH 4.1 have been examined using NMR spectroscopy. Deviations of backbone (13)C(alpha) and (13)CO chemical shifts from random coil values reveal high populations of helical structure in the A and G helix regions and in part of the B helix. However, the H helix is significantly destabilized compared to the wild-type molten globule. Heteronuclear [(1)H]-(15)N NOEs show that, although the polypeptide backbone in the H helix region is more flexible than in the wild-type protein, its motions are restricted by transient hydrophobic interactions with the molten globule core. Quench flow hydrogen exchange measurements reveal stable helical structure in the A and G helices and part of the B helix in the burst phase kinetic intermediate and confirm that the H helix is largely unstructured. Stabilization of structure in the H helix occurs during the slow folding phases, in synchrony with the C and E helices and the CD region. The kinetic and equilibrium molten globule intermediates formed by N132G/E136G are similar in structure. Although both the wild-type apomyoglobin and the mutant fold via compact helical intermediates, the structures of the intermediates and consequently the detailed folding pathways differ. Apomyoglobin is therefore capable of compensating for mutations by using alternative folding pathways within a common basic framework. Tertiary hydrophobic interactions appear to play an important role in the formation and stabilization of secondary structure in the H helix of the N132G/E136G mutant. These studies provide important insights into the interplay between secondary and tertiary structure formation in protein folding.  相似文献   

5.
The folding pathways of four mutants in which bulky hydrophobic residues in the B helix of apomyoglobin (ApoMb) are replaced by alanine (I28A, L29A, I30A, and L32A) have been analyzed using equilibrium and kinetic methods employing NMR, CD, fluorescence and mass spectrometry. Hydrogen exchange pulse-labeling followed by mass spectrometry reveals detectable intermediates in the kinetic folding pathways of each of these mutants. Comparison of the quench-flow data analyzed by NMR for the wild-type protein and the mutants showed that the substitutions I28A, L29A and L32A lead to destabilization of the B helix in the burst phase kinetic intermediate, relative to wild-type apomyoglobin. In contrast, the I30A mutation apparently has a slight stabilizing effect on the B helix in the burst phase intermediate; under weak labeling conditions, residues in the C helix region were also relatively stabilized in the mutant compared to the wild-type protein. This suggests that native-like helix B/helix C packing interactions occur in the folding intermediate. The L32A mutant showed significantly lower proton occupancies in the burst phase for several residues in the G helix, specifically F106, I107, E109 and A110, which are in close proximity to L32 in the X-ray structure of myoglobin, providing direct evidence that native-like helix B/helix G contacts are formed in the apomyoglobin burst phase intermediate. The L29A mutation resulted in an increase in burst phase proton occupancies for several residues in the E helix. Since these regions of the B and E helices are not in contact in the native myoglobin structure, these effects suggest the possibility of non-native B/E packing interactions in the kinetic intermediate. The differing effects of these B helix mutations on the apomyoglobin folding process suggests that each side-chain plays a different and important role in forming stable structure in the burst phase intermediate, and points to a role for both native-like and non-native contacts in stabilization of the folding intermediate.  相似文献   

6.
Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to probe the interactions that stabilize the equilibrium and burst phase kinetic intermediates formed by apomyoglobin. Nine bulky hydrophobic residues in the A, E, G and H helices were replaced by alanine, and the effects on protein stability and kinetic folding pathways were determined. Hydrogen exchange pulse-labeling experiments, with NMR detection, were performed for all mutants. All of the alanine substitutions resulted in changes in proton occupancy or an increased rate of hydrogen-deuterium exchange for amides in the immediate vicinity of the mutation. In addition, most mutations affected residues in distant parts of the amino acid sequence, providing insights into the topology of the burst phase intermediate and the interactions that stabilize its structure. Differences between the pH 4 equilibrium molten globule and the kinetic intermediate are evident: the E helix region plays no discernible role in the equilibrium intermediate, but contributes significantly to stabilization of the ensemble of compact intermediates formed during kinetic refolding. Mutations that interfere with docking of the E helix onto the preformed A/B/G/H helix core substantially decrease the folding rate, indicating that docking and folding of the E helix region occurs prior to formation of the apomyoglobin folding transition state. The results of the mutagenesis experiments are consistent with rapid formation of an ensemble of compact burst phase intermediates with an overall native-like topological arrangement of the A, B, E, G, and H helices. However, the experiments also point to disorder in docking of the E helix and to non-native contacts in the kinetic intermediate. In particular, there is evidence for translocation of the H helix by approximately one helical turn towards its N terminus to maximize hydrophobic interactions with helix G. Thus, the burst phase intermediate observed during kinetic refolding of apomyoglobin consists of an ensemble of compact, kinetically trapped states in which the helix docking appears to be topologically correct, but in which there are local non-native interactions that must be resolved before the protein can fold to the native structure.  相似文献   

7.
We present a detailed investigation of unfolded and partially folded states of a mutant apomyoglobin (apoMb) where the distal histidine has been replaced by phenylalanine (H64F). Previous studies have shown that substitution of His64, located in the E helix of the native protein, stabilizes the equilibrium molten globule and native states and leads to an increase in folding rate and a change in the folding pathway. Analysis of changes in chemical shift and in backbone flexibility, detected via [1H]-15N heteronuclear nuclear Overhauser effect measurements, indicates that the phenylalanine substitution has only minor effects on the conformational ensemble in the acid- and urea-unfolded states, but has a substantial effect on the structure, dynamics, and stability of the equilibrium molten globule intermediate formed near pH 4. In H64F apomyoglobin, additional regions of the polypeptide chain are recruited into the compact core of the molten globule. Since the phenylalanine substitution has negligible effect on the unfolded ensemble, its influence on folding rate and stability comes entirely from interactions within the compact folded or partly folded states. Replacement of His64 with Phe leads to favorable hydrophobic packing between the helix E region and the molten globule core and leads to stabilization of helix E secondary structure and overall thermodynamic stabilization of the molten globule. The secondary structure of the equilibrium molten globule parallels that of the burst phase kinetic intermediate; both intermediates contain significant helical structure in regions of the polypeptide that comprise the A, B, E, G, and H helices of the fully folded protein.  相似文献   

8.
Factors governing the folding pathways and the stability of apomyoglobin have been examined by replacing the distal histidine at position 64 with phenylalanine (H64F). Acid and urea-induced unfolding experiments using CD and fluorescence techniques reveal that the mutant H64F apoprotein is significantly more stable than wild-type apoMb. Kinetic refolding studies of this variant also show a significant difference from wild-type apoMb. The amplitude of the burst phase ellipticity in stopped-flow CD measurements is increased over that of wild-type, an indication that the secondary structure content of the earliest kinetic intermediate is greater in the mutant than in the wild-type protein. In addition, the overall rate of folding is markedly increased. Hydrogen exchange pulse labeling was used to establish the structure of the initial intermediate formed during the burst phase of the H64F mutant. NMR analysis of the samples obtained at different refolding times indicates that the burst phase intermediate contains a stabilized E helix as well as the A, G, and H helices previously found in the wild-type kinetic intermediate. Replacement of the polar distal histidine residue with a nonpolar residue of similar size and shape appears to stabilize the E helix in the early stages of folding due to improved hydrophobic packing. The presence of a hydrophilic histidine at position 64 thus exacts a price in the stability and folding efficiency of the apoprotein, but this residue is nevertheless highly conserved among myoglobins due to its importance in function.  相似文献   

9.
The contributions of some amino acid residues in the A, B, G, and H helices to the formation of the folding nucleus and folding intermediate of apomyoglobin were estimated. The effects of point substitutions of Ala for hydrophobic amino acid residues on the structural stability of the native (N) protein and its folding intermediate (I), as well as on the folding/unfolding rates for four mutant apomyoglobin forms, were studied. The equilibrium and kinetic studies of the folding/unfolding rates of these mutant proteins in a wide range of urea concentrations demonstrated that their native state was considerably destabilized as compared with the wild-type protein, whereas the stability of the intermediate state changed moderately. It was shown that the amino acid residues in the A, G, and H helices contributed insignificantly to the stabilization of the apomyoglobin folding nucleus in the rate-limiting I ? N transition, taking place after the formation of the intermediate, whereas the residue of the B helix was of great importance in the formation of the folding nucleus in this transition.  相似文献   

10.
Eliezer D  Chung J  Dyson HJ  Wright PE 《Biochemistry》2000,39(11):2894-2901
The partly folded state of apomyoglobin at pH 4 represents an excellent model for an obligatory kinetic folding intermediate. The structure and dynamics of this intermediate state have been extensively examined using NMR spectroscopy. Secondary chemical shifts, (1)H-(1)H NOEs, and amide proton temperature coefficients have been used to probe residual structure in the intermediate state, and NMR relaxation parameters T(1) and T(2) and ?(1)H?-(15)N NOE have been analyzed using spectral densities to correlate motion of the polypeptide chain with these structural observations. A significant amount of helical structure remains in the pH 4 state, indicated by the secondary chemical shifts of the (13)C(alpha), (13)CO, (1)H(alpha), and (13)C(beta) nuclei, and the boundaries of this helical structure are confirmed by the locations of (1)H-(1)H NOEs. Hydrogen bonding in the structured regions is predominantly native-like according to the amide proton chemical shifts and their temperature dependence. The locations of the A, G, and H helix segments and the C-terminal part of the B helix are similar to those in native apomyoglobin, consistent with the early, complete protection of the amides of residues in these helices in quench-flow experiments. These results confirm the similarity of the equilibrium form of apoMb at pH 4 and the kinetic intermediate observed at short times in the quench-flow experiment. Flexibility in this structured core is severely curtailed compared with the remainder of the protein, as indicated by the analysis of the NMR relaxation parameters. Regions with relatively high values of J(0) and low values of J(750) correspond well with the A, B, G, and H helices, an indication that nanosecond time scale backbone fluctuations in these regions of the sequence are restricted. Other parts of the protein show much greater flexibility and much reduced secondary chemical shifts. Nevertheless, several regions show evidence of the beginnings of helical structure, including stretches encompassing the C helix-CD loop, the boundary of the D and E helices, and the C-terminal half of the E helix. These regions are clearly not well-structured in the pH 4 state, unlike the A, B, G, and H helices, which form a native-like structured core. However, the proximity of this structured core most likely influences the region between the B and F helices, inducing at least transient helical structure.  相似文献   

11.
The folding pathway of Rd-apocytochrome b562, a four-helix bundle protein, was characterized using Trp and Ala/Gly pair mutations. We found that the Trp mutants (F65W) of both the fully folded Rd-apocytochrome b562 and a partially unfolded intermediate with the N-terminal helix (helix I) unfolded, fold with identical folding rates, providing direct evidence for the conclusion that the rate-limiting transition state folds before the partially unfolded intermediate; and that this hidden intermediate is an on-pathway intermediate. We further characterized the helical structures formed in the rate-limiting transition state by measuring the folding/unfolding rates for Ala/Gly pair mutations at solvent-exposed positions. Little change in folding rates occurred for the Ala/Gly pair mutations at positions in helix I and the C-terminal regions of helix II and IV. In contrast, a significant difference in folding rates was observed for the Ala/Gly pair mutations in helix III and the N-terminal regions of helix II and IV, suggesting that helix III and the N-terminal regions of helix II and IV are formed in the rate-limiting transition state. These results complement those obtained from earlier studies and help to define the folding pathway of Rd-apocytochrome b562 in more detail.  相似文献   

12.
Extensive analysis of accurate quench-flow hydrogen exchange results indicates that the burst phase kinetic intermediate in the folding of apomyoglobin (apoMb) from urea is structurally heterogeneous. The structural variability is associated with the partial folding of the E helix during the burst phase (<6.4ms) of the folding process. Analysis of the effects of exchange-out of amide proton labels during the labeling pulse ( approximately pH 10) of the quench-flow process indicates that three of the amide protons in the E helix are in fact largely protected in the burst phase of folding, while the remainder of the E helix has a substantial complement of amide protons that show biphasic kinetics, i.e. are protected partly during the burst phase and partly during the slow phase of folding. The locations of these amide protons can be used to map the sites of structural heterogeneity in the kinetic molten globule. These sites include, besides the E helix, the ends of the A and B helices and part of the C helix. Our results give significant support to the hypothesis that the kinetic molten globule intermediate of apoMb is native-like.  相似文献   

13.
The conformational features of native and mutant forms of sperm-whale apomyoglobin (apoMb) at neutral pH were probed by limited proteolysis experiments utilizing up to eight proteases of different substrate specificities. It was shown that all proteases selectively cleave apoMb at the level of chain segment 82-94 (HEAELKPLAQSHA), encompassing helix F in the X-ray structure of the holo form of the native protein; for example, thermolysin cleaves the Pro 88-Leu 89 peptide bond. These results indicate that helix F is highly flexible or largely disrupted in apoMb. Because helix F contains the helix-breaking Pro 88 residue, we propose that helix F is kept in place in the native holo protein by a variety of helix-heme stabilizing interactions. To modulate the stability of helix F, the Pro88Ala and Pro88Gly mutants were prepared by site-directed mutagenesis, and their conformational properties investigated by both far-UV circular dichroism spectroscopy and limited proteolysis. The helix content of the Pro88Ala mutant was somewhat enhanced with respect to that of both native and Pro88Gly mutant, as expected from the fact that Ala is the strongest helix inducer among the 20 amino acid residues. The rate of limited proteolysis of the three apoMb variants by thermolysin and proteinase K was in the order native > Pro88Gly > Pro88Ala, in agreement with the scale of helix propensity of Ala, Gly, and Pro. The possible role of the flexible/unfolded chain segment 82-94 for the function and fate of apoMb at the cellular level is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The B-domain of protein A has one of the simplest protein topologies, a three-helix bundle. Its folding has been studied as a model for elementary steps in the folding of larger proteins. Earlier studies suggested that folding might occur by way of a helical hairpin intermediate. Equilibrium hydrogen exchange measurements indicate that the C-terminal helical hairpin could be a potential folding intermediate. Kinetic refolding experiments were performed using stopped-flow circular dichroism and NMR hydrogen-deuterium exchange pulse labeling. Folding of the entire molecule is essentially complete within the 6 ms dead time of the quench-flow apparatus, indicating that the intermediate, if formed, progresses rapidly to the final folded state. Site-directed mutagenesis of the isoleucine residue at position 16 was used to generate a variant protein containing tryptophan (the 116 W mutant). The formation of the putative folding intermediate was expected to be favored in this mutant at the expense of the native folded form, due to predicted unfavorable steric interactions of the bulky tryptophan side chain in the folded state. The 116 W mutant refolds completely within the dead time of a stopped-flow fluorescence experiment. No partly folded intermediate could be detected by either kinetic or equilibrium measurements. Studies of peptide fragments suggest that the protein A sequence has an intrinsic propensity to form a helix II/helix III hairpin. However, its stability appears to be marginal (of the order of 1/2 kT) and it could not be an obligatory intermediate on a defined folding pathway. These results explicitly demonstrate that the protein A B domain folds extremely rapidly by an apparent two-state mechanism without formation of stable partly folded intermediates. Similar mechanisms may also be involved in the rapid folding of subdomains of larger proteins to form the compact molten globule intermediates that often accumulate during the folding process.  相似文献   

15.
Small proteins often fold in an apparent two-state manner with the absence of detectable early-folding intermediates. Recently, using native-state hydrogen exchange, intermediates that exist after the rate-limiting transition state have been identified for several proteins. However, little is known about the folding kinetics from these post-transition intermediates to their corresponding native states. Herein, we have used protein engineering and a laser-induced temperature-jump (T-jump) technique to investigate this issue and have applied it to Rd-apocyt b(562) , a four-helix bundle protein. Previously, it has been shown that Rd-apocyt b(562) folds via an on-pathway hidden intermediate, which has only the N-terminal helix unfolded. In the present study, a double mutation (V16G/I17A) in the N-terminal helix of Rd-apocyt b(562) was made to further increase the relative population of this intermediate state at high temperature by selectively destabilizing the native state. In the circular dichroism thermal melting experiment, this mutant showed apparent two-state folding behavior. However, in the T-jump experiment, two kinetic phases were observed. Therefore, these results are in agreement with the idea that a folding intermediate is populated on the folding pathway of Rd-apocyt b(562) . Moreover, it was found that the exponential growth rate of the native state from this intermediate state is roughly (25 microsec)(-1) at 65 degrees C.  相似文献   

16.
Homodimeric archaeal histones and heterodimeric eukaryotic histones share a conserved structure but fold through different kinetic mechanisms, with a correlation between faster folding/association rates and the population of kinetic intermediates. Wild-type hMfB (from Methanothermus fervidus) has no intrinsic fluorophores; Met35, which is Tyr in hyperthermophilic archaeal histones such as hPyA1 (from Pyrococcus strain GB-3A), was mutated to Tyr and Trp. Two Tyr-to-Trp mutants of hPyA1 were also characterized. All fluorophores were introduced into the long, central alpha-helix of the histone fold. Far-UV circular dichroism (CD) indicated that the fluorophores did not significantly alter the helical content of the histones. The equilibrium unfolding transitions of the histone variants were two-state, reversible processes, with DeltaG degrees (H2O) values within 1 kcal/mol of the wild-type dimers. The hPyA1 Trp variants fold by two-state kinetic mechanisms like wild-type hPyA1, but with increased folding and unfolding rates, suggesting that the mutated residues (Tyr-32 and Tyr-36) contribute to transition state structure. Like wild-type hMfB, M35Y and M35W hMfB fold by a three-state mechanism, with a stopped-flow CD burst-phase monomeric intermediate. The M35 mutants populate monomeric intermediates with increased secondary structure and stability but exhibit decreased folding rates; this suggests that nonnative interactions occur from burial of the hydrophobic Tyr and Trp residues in this kinetic intermediate. These results implicate the long central helix as a key component of the structure in the kinetic monomeric intermediates of hMfB as well as the dimerization transition state in the folding of hPyA1.  相似文献   

17.
F M Hughson  R L Baldwin 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4415-4422
Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to study the effect on the stability of human apomyoglobin (apoMb) of modifying the size, hydrophobicity, and charge of a central residue in the G.B helix-helix packing interface. Some stability measurements have also been made on the corresponding holomyoglobins (heme present). Cys-110, a central helix pairing residue in the G helix, has been changed to Ala, Ser, Asp, and Leu. Stability to low-pH-induced unfolding has been measured for both native apoMb and the compact folding intermediate discovered by Griko et al. [Griko, Y. V., Privalov, P. L., Venyaminov, S. Y., & Kutyshenko, V. P. (1988) J. Mol. Biol. 202, 127-138]. As judged by its circular dichroism spectrum, this intermediate has a substantial helix content (about 35%). Whether or not this inferred helical structure is closely related to the myoglobin structure is not yet known. The mutational evidence shows that integrity of G.B helix pairing is important for the stability of apoMb as well as of myoglobin and that this helix pairing site is very sensitive to both steric and electrostatic disruption. Our results also suggest that G.B helix pairing does not stabilize the compact intermediate; hence, disrupting this site destabilizes the native protein relative to the compact intermediate. Such selective destabilization of the native state relative to equilibrium folding intermediates is not restricted to acid denaturation: urea denaturation of the Leu mutant appears to display at least one stable intermediate, while wild-type and the remaining mutant apoMbs undergo two-state urea unfolding transitions.  相似文献   

18.
Despite the widespread presence of the globin fold in most living organisms, only eukaryotic globins have been employed as model proteins in folding/stability studies so far. This work introduces the first thermodynamic and kinetic characterization of a prokaryotic globin, that is, the apo form of the heme-binding domain of flavohemoglobin (apoHmpH) from Escherichia coli. This bacterial globin has a widely different sequence but nearly identical structure to its eukaryotic analogues. We show that apoHmpH is a well-folded monomeric protein with moderate stability at room temperature [apparent ΔG°UN(w) = − 3.1 ± 0.3 kcal mol− 1; mUN = − 1.7 kcal mol− 1 M− 1] and predominant α-helical structure. Remarkably, apoHmpH is the fastest-folding globin known to date, as it refolds about 4- to 16-fold more rapidly than its eukaryotic analogues (e.g., sperm whale apomyoglobin and soybean apoleghemoglobin), populating a compact kinetic intermediate (βI = 0.9 ± 0.2) with significant helical content. Additionally, the single Trp120 (located in the native H helix) becomes locked into a fully native-like environment within 6 ms, suggesting that this residue and its closest spatial neighbors complete their folding at ultrafast (submillisecond) speed. In summary, apoHmpH is a bacterial globin that shares the general folding scheme (i.e., a rapid burst phase followed by slower rate-determining phases) of its eukaryotic analogues but displays an overall faster folding and a kinetic intermediate with some fully native-like traits. This study supports the view that the general folding features of bacterial and eukaryotic globins are preserved through evolution while kinetic details differ.  相似文献   

19.
The small (87-residue) α-helical protein Im7 (an inhibitor protein for colicin E7 that provides immunity to cells producing colicin E7) folds via a three-state mechanism involving an on-pathway intermediate. This kinetic intermediate contains three of four native helices that are oriented in a non-native manner so as to minimise exposed hydrophobic surface area at this point in folding. The short (6-residue) helix III has been shown to be unstructured in the intermediate ensemble and does not dock onto the developing hydrophobic core until after the rate-limiting transition state has been traversed. After helix III has docked, it adopts an α-helical secondary structure, and the side chains of residues within this region provide contacts that are crucial to native-state stability. In order to probe further the role of helix III in the folding mechanism of Im7, we created a variant that contains an eight-amino-acid polyalanine-like helix stabilised by a Glu-Arg salt bridge and an Asn-Pro-Gly capping motif, juxtaposed C-terminal to the natural 6-residue helix III. The effect of this insertion on the structure of the native protein and its folding mechanism were studied using NMR and ?-value analysis, respectively. The results reveal a robust native structure that is not perturbed by the presence of the extended helix III. Mutational analysis performed to probe the folding mechanism of the redesigned protein revealed a conserved mechanism involving the canonical three-helical intermediate. The results suggest that folding via a three-helical species stabilised by both native and non-native interactions is an essential feature of Im7 folding, independent of the helical propensity of helix III.  相似文献   

20.
The pressure denaturation of wild type and mutant apomyoglobin (apoMb) was investigated using a high-pressure, high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance and high-pressure fluorescence techniques. Wild type apoMb is resistant to pressures up to 80 MPa, and denatures to a high-pressure intermediate, I(p), between 80 and 200 MPa. A further increase of pressure to 500 MPa results in denaturation of the intermediate. The two tryptophans, both in the A helix, remain sequestered from solvent in the high-pressure intermediate, which retains some native NOESY cross peaks in the AGH core as well as between F33 and F43. High-pressure fluorescence shows that the tryptophans remain inaccessible to solvent in the I(p) state. Thus the high-pressure intermediate has some structural properties in common with the apoMb I(2) acid intermediate. The resistance of the AGH core to pressures up to 200 MPa provides further evidence that the intrinsic stability of these alpha-helices is responsible for their presence in a number of equilibrium intermediates as well as in the earliest kinetic folding intermediate. Mutations in the AGH core designed to disrupt packing by burying a charge or increasing the size of a hydrophobic residue significantly perturbed the unfolding of native apoMb to the high-pressure intermediate. The F123W and S108L mutants both unfolded at lower pressures, while retaining some resistance to pressures below 50 MPa. The charge burial mutants, A130K and S108K, are not stable at very low pressures and both denature to the intermediate by 100 MPa, half of the pressure required for wild type apoMb. Thus a similar intermediate state is created independent of the method of perturbation, and mutations have similar effects on native state destabilization for both methods of denaturation. These data suggest that equilibrium intermediates that can be formed through different means are likely to resemble a kinetic intermediate.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号