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1.
The number of proline residues in a protein should have very marked consequences for the rates of protein unfolding and refolding according to the model proposed by Brandts et al. (1975). Kinetic simulations of this model indicate that the half-time for refolding of a polypeptide chain with 20 proline residues should be greater than 10 minutes and should increase by about an order of magnitude for each additional 10 proline residues. Various means are considered by which the rate of protein folding in vivo and in vitro might be increased.  相似文献   

2.
Peptide bonds in protein structures are mainly found in trans conformation with a torsion angle ω close to 180°. Only a very low proportion is observed in cis conformation with ω angle around 0°. Cistrans isomerization leads to local conformation changes which play an important role in many biological processes. In this paper, we reviewed the recent discoveries and research achievements in this field. First, we presented some interesting cases of biological processes in which cistrans isomerization is directly implicated. It is involved in protein folding and various aspect of protein function like dimerization interfaces, autoinhibition control, channel gating, membrane binding. Then we reviewed conservation studies of cis peptide bonds which emphasized evolution constraints in term of sequence and local conformation. Finally we made an overview of the numerous molecular dynamics studies and prediction methodologies already developed to take into account this structural feature in the research area of protein modeling. Many cis peptide bonds have not been recognized as such due to the limited resolution of the data and to the refinement protocol used. Cistrans proline isomerization reactions represents a vast and promising research area that still needs to be further explored for a better understanding of isomerization mechanism and improvement of cis peptide bond predictions.  相似文献   

3.
The protein folding process is often in vitro rate‐limited by slow cis‐trans proline isomerization steps. Importantly, the rate of this process in vivo is accelerated by prolyl isomerases (PPIases). The archetypal PPIase is the human cyclophilin 18 (Cyp18 or CypA), and Arg 55 has been demonstrated to play a crucial role when studying short peptide substrates in the catalytic action of Cyp18 by stabilizing the transition state of isomerization. However, in this study we show that a R55A mutant of Cyp18 is as efficient as the wild type to accelerate the refolding reaction of human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II). Thus, it is evident that the active‐site located Arg 55 is not required for catalysis of the rate‐limiting prolyl cis‐trans isomerization steps during the folding of a protein substrate as HCA II. Nevertheless, catalysis of cis‐trans proline isomerization in HCA II occurs in the active‐site of Cyp18, since binding of the inhibitor cyclosporin A abolishes rate acceleration of the refolding reaction. Obviously, the catalytic mechanisms of Cyp18 can differ when acting upon a simple model peptide, four residues long, with easily accessible Pro residues compared with a large protein molecule undergoing folding with partly or completely buried Pro residues. In the latter case, the isomerization kinetics are significantly slower and simpler mechanistic factors such as desolvation and/or strain might operate during folding‐assisted catalysis, since binding to the hydrophobic active site is still a prerequisite for catalysis.  相似文献   

4.

Background

Proline residues affect protein folding and stability via cis/trans isomerization of peptide bonds and by the Cγ-exo or -endo puckering of their pyrrolidine rings. Peptide bond conformation as well as puckering propensity can be manipulated by proper choice of ring substituents, e.g. Cγ-fluorination. Synthetic chemistry has routinely exploited ring-substituted proline analogs in order to change, modulate or control folding and stability of peptides.

Methodology/Principal Findings

In order to transmit this synthetic strategy to complex proteins, the ten proline residues of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) were globally replaced by (4R)- and (4S)-fluoroprolines (FPro). By this approach, we expected to affect the cis/trans peptidyl-proline bond isomerization and pyrrolidine ring puckering, which are responsible for the slow folding of this protein. Expression of both protein variants occurred at levels comparable to the parent protein, but the (4R)-FPro-EGFP resulted in irreversibly unfolded inclusion bodies, whereas the (4S)-FPro-EGFP led to a soluble fluorescent protein. Upon thermal denaturation, refolding of this variant occurs at significantly higher rates than the parent EGFP. Comparative inspection of the X-ray structures of EGFP and (4S)-FPro-EGFP allowed to correlate the significantly improved refolding with the Cγ-endo puckering of the pyrrolidine rings, which is favored by 4S-fluorination, and to lesser extents with the cis/trans isomerization of the prolines.

Conclusions/Significance

We discovered that the folding rates and stability of GFP are affected to a lesser extent by cis/trans isomerization of the proline bonds than by the puckering of pyrrolidine rings. In the Cγ-endo conformation the fluorine atoms are positioned in the structural context of the GFP such that a network of favorable local interactions is established. From these results the combined use of synthetic amino acids along with detailed structural knowledge and existing protein engineering methods can be envisioned as a promising strategy for the design of complex tailor-made proteins and even cellular structures of superior properties compared to the native forms.  相似文献   

5.
The structural characterization of [W8S]contryphan Vn, an analogue of Contryphan Vn with tryptophan 8 substituted with a serine residue (W8S), was performed by NMR spectroscopy, molecular dynamics simulations and fluorescence spectroscopy. Contryphan Vn, a bioactive cyclic peptide from the venom of the cone snail Conus ventricosus, contains an S–S bridge between two cysteines and a d-tryptophan. Like other Contryphans, [W8S]contryphan Vn has proline 7 isomerized trans, while the proline 4 has nearly equivalent populations of cis and trans configurations. The thermodynamic and kinetic parameters of the transcis isomerization of proline 4 were measured. The isomers of [W8S]contryphan Vn with proline 4 in cis and trans show structural differences. The absence of the salt bridge between the same Asp2 and Lys6, present in Contryphan Vn, may be attributed to the lack of the hydrophobic side chain of Trp8 where it likely protects the electrostatic interactions. These results may contribute to identifying, in these cyclic peptides, the structural determinants of the mechanism of proline transcis isomerization, this being also an important step in protein folding.  相似文献   

6.
The hexapeptide Gly-Gly-Pro-Tyr-Gly-Gly has been synthesized and its tyrosine residue converted to nitrotyrosine by reaction with tetranitromethane. When diluted from dimethylsulfoxide into aqueous solution, the nitrated hexapeptide undergoes a slow conformational change characterized by a change in the ionization state of the nitrotyrosine group. This slow reaction is not observed with peptides containing nitrotyrosine and no proline. Also, the rate and activation enthalpy of this slow conformational change suggest that it could be due to proline cis-trans isomerization. The possibility of measuring the rate of cis-trans isomerization of proline residues in a polypeptide chain is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Suggestive but not decisive evidence indicates that in vivo peptide chain folding is completed in a time not much longer than that required for covalent peptide synthesis. Extrapolation of model peptide rates of the cistrans prolyl isomerization leads to the prediction tht protein folding should be much slower than the apparent in vivo rates. On the assumption that rapid protein folding in vivo is the rule, three routes are suggested by which a protein undergoing biosynthesis can avoid a strongly slowed folding rate: (1) by a peptide chain-elongation process that adds only trans peptide bonds, follwed by a rapid folding process that incorporates them into a three-dimensional structure, raising the energy barrier to isomerization; (2) by folding to produce three dimensional structures that position prolyl residues largely in chain turns on the protein surface, where the residue may be either cis or trans without large effects on the protein structure and function; (3) prolyl cistrans isomerization may be speeded by the formation of peptide loops.  相似文献   

8.
A test has been made of the proposal that: (a) the extended two-state model describes the kinetic intermediates seen in the folding transition of RNAase A, i.e. that the only species present in folding experiments are the native protein and multiple forms of the completely unfolded protein; and (b) that the interconversion between the two known unfolded forms of RNAase A (the U1
U2 reaction) is described solely by the cis-trans isomerization of the proline residues. The test is to measure the rate of the U1
U2 reaction in a wide range of refolding conditions and to compare these data with the kinetic properties of proline isomerization.The main results are as follows. (1) The activation enthalpy of the U1
U2 reaction in refolding conditions (pH 6, 20 ° to 40 °C) is less than 5 kcal/mol. This is much too small to be explained as proline isomerization. (2) Both the rate and the activation enthalpy change sharply at guanidine hydrochloride concentrations below 2 m. There appear to be two pathways for the U1
U2 reaction in refolding conditions, and the slower pathway is favored by adding guanidine hydrochloride. (3) The rate and activation enthalpy for proline isomerization in l-alanyl-l-proline are unaffected by 2 m-guanidine hydrochloride.The results show that the proline isomerization hypothesis and the extended two-state model cannot both be correct for RNAase A. They suggest that partial folding occurs rapidly in refolding conditions and that the extended two-state model is invalid. They leave open the question of whether or not proline isomerization is the rate-limiting step in the U1
U2 reaction.Another possible source of slow configurational reactions in the unfolded state is mentioned. The three major, overlapping, disulfide-bonded loops of RNAase A can exist in two isomeric configurations. Interconversion of these isomers requires pulling one loop, or one end of the polypeptide chain, through a second loop and this is likely to be a slow process.In some conditions, heat-unfolded but not guanidine-unfolded RNAase A shows a second slow-refolding process. It may result from aggregates of the heatunfolded protein which are formed and broken up slowly. Conditions are given for eliminating this reaction.  相似文献   

9.
10.
We wished to test the hypothesis that the non proline cis to trans isomerization of the peptide bond at position 167 in the S. aureus β-lactamase PC1 exerts a significant controlling effect on the folding pathway of this enzyme. The previous data presented in support of this hypothesis could not rule out the effect of factors unrelated to non-proline cis/trans isomerization. We have used the plasmid pET9d to direct soluble overproduction of the S. aureus β-lactamase PC1 and a site-directed mutant (Ile 167 to Pro) in Escherichia coli. Following purification the proteins were subjected to a comparative analysis of the kinetics of unfolding and refolding using the techniques of near- and far-UV circular dichroism spectroscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy in conjunction with “double-jump” experiments. Results show that the fully-unfolded I167P mutant enzyme retains 20% of molecules in a fast-refolding form and that slower-refolding molecules fold faster than the recombinant wild-type enzyme. The final stage of folding involves folding of the Ω-loop into a conformation essential for enzymatic activity. In support of the original hypothesis, the folding of this Ω-loop is rate limited by the isomerization of the Glu 166-Ile 167 peptide bond. Proteins 33:550–557, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The role of proline residues in the folding of the trypsin inhibitor derivative RCAM(14–38) has been studied by testing for slow-folding species of the unfolded protein, which could result from the introduction of wrong proline isomers after unfolding. The unfolded protein at 25 °C contains chiefly fast-folding (UF) molecules: they refold with a time constant of 40 milliseconds at pH 6.8 in 1.9 m-guanidinium chloride. At least one minor slow-folding (Us) species has been found, using fluorescence to monitor refolding. The reaction in which this Us species is formed after unfolding shows the properties expected for the cis: Irans isomerization of a proline residue. When refolding is monitored by tyrosine absorbance, two minor slow reactions are found. The faster reaction is in the same time range (15 s at 25 °C) as that studied by fluorescence, and the slower reaction is quite slow (200 s at 25 °C). It is not known whether the slower reaction results from a second Us species. There are four trans proline residues in bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor: the proportion of slow-folding molecules (not more than 25% at 25 °C) is smaller than expected if every proline residue can produce a Us species and if the cis to trans ratio of each residue after unfolding is at least 0.1:0.9.Criteria based on folding kinetics are given for classifying the types of folding reaction shown by unfolded molecules containing a single wrong proline isomer. Levitt (1980) has classified three types of proline residues according to the energy difference (small, intermediate or large) between the native protein and the predicted minimum energy structure containing a wrong proline isomer. He suggests that these three types of proline residues can be recognized by the types of folding reactions they produce. Only type II (intermediate) folding reactions have thus far been characterized by the criteria introduced here. We point out that the type of folding reaction depends also on the folding conditions, and a possible explanation for this effect is given.  相似文献   

12.
One of the rate-limiting steps in protein folding has been shown to be the cis-trans isomerization of proline residues, which is catalyzed by a range of peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerases. To characterize the interaction between model peptides and the periplasmic peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerase SurA from E. coli, we employed a chemical cross-linking strategy that has been used previously to elucidate the interaction of substrates with other folding catalysts. The interaction between purified SurA and model peptides was significant in that it showed saturation and was abolished by denaturation of SurA; however the interaction was independent of the presence of proline residues in the model peptides. From results obtained by limited proteolysis we conclude that an N-terminal fragment of SurA, comprising 150 amino acids that do not contain the active sites involved in the peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerization, is essential for the binding of peptides by SurA. This was confirmed by probing the interaction of the model peptide with the recombinant N-terminal fragment, expressed in Escherichia coli. Hence we propose that, similar to protein disulfide isomerase and other folding catalysts, SurA exhibits a modular architecture composed of a substrate binding domain and distinct catalytically active domains.  相似文献   

13.

Background  

The majority of peptide bonds in proteins are found to occur in thetransconformation. However, for proline residues, a considerable fraction of Prolyl peptide bonds adopt thecisform. Prolinecis/transisomerization is known to play a critical role in protein folding, splicing, cell signaling and transmembrane active transport. Accurate prediction of prolinecis/transisomerization in proteins would have many important applications towards the understanding of protein structure and function.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Kinetic intermediates in protein folding are short-lived and therefore difficult to detect and to characterize. In the folding of polypeptide chains with incorrect isomers of Xaa-Pro peptide bonds the final rate-limiting transition to the native state is slow, since it is coupled to prolyl isomerization. Incorrect prolyl isomers thus act as effective traps for folding intermediates and allow their properties to be studied more easily. We employed this strategy to investigate the mechanism of slow folding of ribonuclease T1. In our experiments we use a mutant form of this protein with a single cis peptide bond at proline 39. During refolding, protein chains with an incorrect trans proline 39 can rapidly form extensive secondary structure. The CD signal in the amide region is regained within the dead-time of stopped-flow mixing (15 ms), indicating a fast formation of the single alpha-helix of ribonuclease T1. This step is correlated with partial formation of a hydrophobic core, because the fluorescence emission maximum of tryptophan 59 is shifted from 349 nm to 325 nm within less than a second. After about 20 s of refolding an intermediate is present that shows about 40% enzymatic activity compared to the completely refolded protein. In addition, the solvent accessibility of tryptophan 59 is drastically reduced in this intermediate and comparable to that of the native state as determined by acrylamide quenching of the tryptophan fluorescence. Activity and quenching measurements have long dead-times and therefore we do not know whether enzymatic activity and solvent accessibility also change in the time range of milliseconds. At this stage of folding at least part of the beta-sheet structure is already present, since it hosts the active site of the enzyme. The trans to cis isomerization of the tyrosine 38-proline 39 peptide bond in the intermediate and consequently the formation of native protein is very slow (tau = 6,500 s at pH 5.0 and 10 degrees C). It is accompanied by an additional increase in tryptophan fluorescence, by the development of the fine structure of the tryptophan emission spectrum, and by the regain of the full enzymatic activity. This indicates that the packing of the hydrophobic core, which involves both tryptophan 59 and proline 39, is optimized in this step. Apparently, refolding polypeptide chains with an incorrect prolyl isomer can very rapidly form partially folded intermediates with native-like properties.  相似文献   

16.
《Biophysical journal》2021,120(23):5207-5218
The conserved fold of thioredoxin (Trx)-like thiol/disulfide oxidoreductases contains an invariant cis-proline residue (P76 in Escherichia coli Trx) that is essential for Trx function and that is responsible for the folding rate-limiting step. E. coli Trx contains four additional prolines, which are all in the trans conformation in the native state. Notably, a recent study revealed that replacement of all four trans prolines in Trx by alanines (Trx variant Trx1P) further slowed the rate-limiting step 25-fold, indicating that one or several of the four trans prolines accelerate the trans-to-cis transition of P76 in Trx wild-type (wt). Here, we characterized the folding kinetics of Trx variants containing cisP76 and one or several of the natural trans prolines of Trx wt with NMR spectroscopy. First, we demonstrate that the isomerization reaction in Trx1P is a pure two-state transition between two distinct tertiary structures, in which all observed NMR resonances changes follow the same first-order kinetics. Moreover, we show that trans-P68 is the critical residue responsible for the faster folding of wt Trx relative to the single-proline (P76) variant Trx1P, as the two-proline variant Trx2P(P76P68) already folds seven times faster than Trx1P. trans-P34 also accelerates trans-to-cis isomerization of P76, albeit to a smaller extent. Overall, the results demonstrate that trans prolines can significantly modulate the kinetics of rate-limiting trans-to-cis proline isomerization in protein folding. Finally, we discuss possible mechanisms of acceleration and the potential significance of a protein-internal folding acceleration mechanism for Trx in a living cell.  相似文献   

17.
It has long been understood that the proline residue has lower configurational entropy than any other amino acid residue due to pyrrolidine ring hindrance. The peptide bond between proline and its preceding amino acid (Xaa-Pro) typically exists as a mixture of cis- and trans-isomers in the unfolded protein. Cis–trans isomerization of Xaa-Pro peptide bonds are infrequent, but still occur in folded proteins. Therefore, the effects of the cis–trans isomerization equilibrium in both unfolded and folded states should be taken into account when estimating the stability contribution of a specific proline residue. In order to study the stability contribution of the four proline residues to the hyperthermophilic protein Ssh10b, in this work, we expressed and purified a series of Pro→Ala mutants of Ssh10b, and performed correlative unfolding experiments in detail. We proposed a new unfolding model including proline isomerization. The model predicts that the contribution of a proline residue to protein stability is associated with the thermodynamic equilibrium between cis- and trans-isomers both in the unfolded and folded states, agreeing well with the experimental results.  相似文献   

18.
Conformational energy calculations have been used to study the role of the proline residues in the folding of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. In the calculation, each of the four proline residues of this small protein is forced from the trans to cis peptide isomer while still part of the native folded structure. The cis proline residue can always be accommodated by small changes of the native conformation (< 1 Å root-mean-square deviation). For three of the four proline residues, Pro2, Pro9 and Pro 13, being in the cis form is calculated to destabilize the folded conformation by less than 11 kcal/mol, suggesting that rapid folding to a stable native-like conformation can occur with either isomeric form. For one of these three, Pro13, the destabilization is only 1 kcal/mol, suggesting the existence of an alternative folded native conformation with Pro13 cis. The fourth proline residue, Pro8, is calculated to destabilize the native conformation by so much (33 kcal/mol) that it will block folding in the manner proposed by Brandts et al. (1975).  相似文献   

19.
Bhat R  Wedemeyer WJ  Scheraga HA 《Biochemistry》2003,42(19):5722-5728
The kinetics of cis-trans isomerization of individual X-Pro peptide groups is used to study the backbone dynamics of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase A). We previously developed and validated a fluorescence method for monitoring the cis-trans isomerization of the Tyr92-Pro93 and Asn113-Pro114 peptide groups of RNase A under unfolding conditions [Juminaga, D., Wedemeyer, W. J., and Scheraga, H. A. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 11614-11620]. The essence of this method is to introduce a fluorescent residue (Tyr or Trp) in a position adjacent to the isomerizing proline (if one is not already present) and to eliminate the fluorescence of other such residues adjacent to prolines by mutating them to phenylalanine. Here, we extend this method to observe the cis-trans isomerization of these peptide groups under folding conditions using two site-directed mutants (Y92F and Y115F) of RNase A. Both isomerizations decelerate with increasing concentrations of GdnHCl, with nearly identical m values (1.11 and 1.19 M(-1), respectively) and extrapolated zero-GdnHCl time constants (42 and 32 s, respectively); by contrast, under unfolding conditions, the cis-trans isomerizations of both Pro93 and Pro114 are independent of GdnHCl concentration. Remarkably, the isomerization rates under folding conditions at GdnHCl concentrations above 1 M are significantly slower than those measured under unfolding conditions. The temperature dependence of the Pro114 isomerization under folding conditions is also unusual; whereas Pro93 exhibits an activation energy typical of proline isomerization (19.4 kcal/mol), Pro114 exhibits a sharply reduced activation energy of 5.7 kcal/mol. A structurally plausible model accounts for these results and, in particular, shows that folding conditions strongly accelerate the cis-trans isomerization of both peptide groups to their native cis conformation, suggesting the presence of flickering local structure in their beta-hairpins.  相似文献   

20.
In mammals, small heat-shock proteins (sHSPs) typically assemble into interconverting, polydisperse oligomers. The dynamic exchange of sHSP oligomers is regulated, at least in part, by molecular interactions between the α-crystallin domain and the C-terminal region (CTR). Here we report solution-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy investigations of the conformation and dynamics of the disordered and flexible CTR of human HSP27, a systemically expressed sHSP. We observed multiple NMR signals for residues in the vicinity of proline 194, and we determined that, while all observed forms are highly disordered, the extra resonances arise from cis-trans peptidyl-prolyl isomerization about the G193-P194 peptide bond. The cis-P194 state is populated to near 15% at physiological temperatures, and, although both cis- and trans-P194 forms of the CTR are flexible and dynamic, both states show a residual but differing tendency to adopt β-strand conformations. In NMR spectra of an isolated CTR peptide, we observed similar evidence for isomerization involving proline 182, found within the IPI/V motif. Collectively, these data indicate a potential role for cis-trans proline isomerization in regulating the oligomerization of sHSPs.  相似文献   

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