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1.
The stability against chemical denaturants of the elongation factor EF-1alpha (SsEF-1alpha), a protein isolated from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus has been characterized in detail. Indeed, the atypical shape of the protein structure and the unusual living conditions of the host organism prompted us to analyze the effect of urea and guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) on the GDP complex of the enzyme (SsEF-1alpha x GDP) by fluorescence and circular dichroism. These studies were also extended to the nucleotide-free form of the protein (nfSsEF-1alpha). Interestingly, the experiments show that the denaturation curves of both SsEF-1alpha forms present a single inflection point, which is indicative of a cooperative unfolding process with no intermediate species. Moreover, the chemically induced unfolding process of both SsEF-1alpha x GDP and nfSsEF-1alpha is fully reversible. Both SsEF-1alpha forms exhibit remarkable stability against urea, but they do not display a strong resistance to the denaturing action of GuHCl. These findings suggest that electrostatic interactions significantly contribute to SsEF-1alpha stability.  相似文献   

2.
Ervatamin A, a cysteine proteases from Ervatamia coronaria, has been used as model system to examine structure-function relationship by equilibrium unfolding methods. Ervatamin A belongs to alpha+beta class of proteins and exhibit stability towards temperature and chemical denaturants. Acid induced unfolding of ervatamin A was incomplete with respect to the structural content of the enzyme. Between pH 0.5 and 2.0, the enzyme is predominantly in beta-sheet conformation and shows a strong ANS binding suggesting the existence of a partially unfolded intermediate state (I(A) state). Surprisingly, high concentrations of GuHCl required to unfold this state and the transition mid points GuHCl induced unfolding curves are significantly higher. GuHCl induced unfolding of ervatamin A at pH 3.0 as well as at pH 4.0 is complex and cannot be satisfactorily fit to a two-state model for unfolding. Besides, a strong ANS binding to the protein is observed at low concentration of GuHCl, indicating the presence of intermediate in the unfolding pathway. On the other hand, even in the presence of urea (8M) the enzyme retains all the activity as well as structural parameters at neutral pH. However, the protein is susceptible to urea unfolding at pH 3.0 and below. Urea induced unfolding of ervatamin A at pH 3.0 is cooperative and the transitions curves obtained by different probes are and non-coincidental. Temperature denaturation of ervatamin A in I(A) state is non-cooperative, contrary to the cooperativity seen with native protein, suggesting the presence of two parts in the molecular structure of ervatamin A may be domains, with different stability that unfolds in steps. Careful inspection of biophysical properties of intermediate states populated in urea and GuHCl (I(UG) state) induced unfolding suggests all these three intermediates are identical and populated in different conditions. However, the properties of the intermediate (I(A) state) identified at pH approximately 1.5 are different from those of the I(UG) state.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of methylurea, N,N'-dimethylurea, ethylurea, and butylurea as well as guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl), urea and pH on the thermal stability, structural properties, and preferential solvation changes accompanying the thermal unfolding of ribonuclease A (RNase A) has been investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), UV, and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. The results show that the thermal stability of RNase A decreases with increasing concentration of denaturants and the size of the hydrophobic group substituted on the urea molecule. From CD measurements in the near- and far-UV range, it has been observed that the tertiary structure of RNase A melts at about 3 degrees C lower temperature than its secondary structure, which means that the hierarchy in structural building blocks exists for RNase A even at conditions at which according to DSC and UV measurements the RNase A unfolding can be interpreted in terms of a two-state approximation. The far-UV CD spectra also show that the final denatured states of RNase A at high temperatures in the presence of different denaturants including 4.5 M GuHCl are similar to each other but different from the one obtained in 4.5 M GuHCl at 25 degrees C. The concentration dependence of the preferential solvation change delta r23, expressed as the number of cosolvent molecules entering or leaving the solvation shell of the protein upon denaturation and calculated from DSC data, shows the same relative denaturation efficiency of alkylureas as other methods.  相似文献   

4.
The unfolding thermodynamics of the circular enterocin protein AS-48, produced by Enterococcus faecalis, has been studied. The native structure of the 70-amino-acid-long protein turned out to be extremely stable against heat and denaturant-induced unfolding. At pH 2.5 and low ionic strength, it denatures at 102 degrees C, while at 25 degrees C, the structure only unfolds in 6.3 M guanidinium hydrochloride (GuHCl) and does not unfold even in 8 M urea. A comparison of its thermal unfolding in water and in the presence of urea shows a good correspondence between the two deltaGw(298) values, which are about 30 kJ mol(-1) at pH 2.5 and low ionic strength. The stability of the structure is highly dependent upon ionic strength and so GuHCl acts both as a denaturant and a stabilising agent. This seems to be why the deltaGw(298) value calculated from the unfolding data in GuHCl is twice as high as in the absence of this salt. At least part of the high stability of native AS-48 can almost certainly be put down to its circular organization since other structural features are quite normal for a protein of this size.  相似文献   

5.
Wrightin, a serine protease from Wrightia tinctoria, has been used as model system to examine structure-function and stability. Our studies show high stability of the enzyme with major elements of secondary structure being β-sheets. Under neutral conditions the enzyme is stable in 8 M urea and high temperature. GuHCl induced unfolding of wrightin at lower pH cannot be satisfactorily fit to a two state model for unfolding. Multiple intermediates were identified during unfolding of wrightin. Further, two intermediates, early and late are identified in the urea induced unfolding pathway at pH 3.0. Spectroscopic properties of intermediate states are analyzed and interpreted.  相似文献   

6.
During chemical denaturation different intermediate states are populated or suppressed due to the nature of the denaturant used. Chemical denaturation by guanidine-HCl (GuHCl) of human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) leads to a three-state unfolding process (Cm,NI=1.0 and Cm,IU=1.9 M GuHCl) with formation of an equilibrium molten-globule intermediate that is stable at moderate concentrations of the denaturant (1-2 M) with a maximum at 1.5 M GuHCl. On the contrary, urea denaturation gives rise to an apparent two-state unfolding transition (Cm=4.4 M urea). However, 8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonate (ANS) binding and decreased refolding capacity revealed the presence of the molten globule in the middle of the unfolding transition zone, although to a lesser extent than in GuHCl. Cross-linking studies showed the formation of moderate oligomer sized (300 kDa) and large soluble aggregates (>1000 kDa). Inclusion of 1.5 M NaCl to the urea denaturant to mimic the ionic character of GuHCl leads to a three-state unfolding behavior (Cm,NI=3.0 and Cm,IU=6.4 M urea) with a significantly stabilized molten-globule intermediate by the chloride salt. Comparisons between NaCl and LiCl of the impact on the stability of the various states of HCA II in urea showed that the effects followed what could be expected from the Hofmeister series, where Li+ is a chaotropic ion leading to decreased stability of the native state. Salt addition to the completely urea unfolded HCA II also led to an aggregation prone unfolded state, that has not been observed before for carbonic anhydrase. Refolding from this state only provided low recoveries of native enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Spectroscopic, calorimetric, and proteolytic methods were utilized to evaluate the stability of the kinetically stable, differentially glycosylated, dimeric serine protease milin as a function of pH (1.0–11.0), temperature, urea, and GuHCl denaturation in presence of 8 M urea at pH 2.0. The stability of milin remains equivalent to that of native at pH 1.0–11.0. However, negligible and reversible alteration in structure upon temperature transition has been observed at pH 2.0 and with 1.6 M GuHCl. Irreversible and incomplete calorimetric transition with apparent T m > 100°C was observed at basic pH (9.0 and 10.0). Urea-induced unfolding at pH 4.0, and at pH 2.0 with GuHCl, in presence of 8 M urea also reveals incomplete unfolding. Milin has been found to exhibit proteolytic resistant in either native or denatured state against various commercial proteases. These results imply that the high conformational stability of milin against various denaturating conditions enable its potential use in protease-based industries.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the differential stability of the two domains of papain, a broad specific cysteine protease, which is one of the most commonly used enzyme in various industries. The denaturant induced equilibrium unfolding of this enzyme has been investigated by different spectroscopic techniques. By site specific fluorescent labeling of one of the domain, we observed that during the unfolding process, L domain unfolds first and the R domain unfolds at a later stage. Spectroscopic studies reveal a biphasic unfolding transition, suggesting the presence of an intermediate during the unfolding process. The intermediate is observed between 1.5 and 2.5 M GuHCl and between 3 and 5 M in the case of urea induced unfolding. The unfolding process for both native to intermediate and intermediate to unfolded species is reversible in the case of urea unfolding, with a ΔG of ?2.4 and ?5.5 kcal/mole respectively where as for GuHCl unfolding only native to intermediate species is reversible indicating the predominance of hydrophobic interactions in the stability of the molecule.  相似文献   

9.
SUMO-1 (1-97) is a crucial protein in the machinery of post-translational modifications. We observed by circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy that urea-induced unfolding of this protein is a complex process with the possibility of occurrence of detectable intermediates along the way. The tertiary structure is completely lost around approximately 4.5 M urea with a transition mid-point at 2.53 M urea, while the secondary structure unfolding seems to show two transitions, with mid-points at 2.42 M and 5.69 M urea. We have elucidated by systematic urea titration, the equilibrium residue level structural and dynamics changes along the entire folding/unfolding transition by multidimensional NMR. With urea dilution, the protein is seen to progressively lose most of the broad beta-domain structural preferences present at 8 M urea, acquire some helical propensities at 5 M urea, and lose some of them again on further dilution of urea. Between 3 M and 2 M urea, the protein starts afresh to acquire native structural features. These observations are contrary to the conventional notion that proteins fold with monotonously increasing native-type preferences. For folding below approximately 3 M urea, the region around the alpha1 helix appears to be a potential folding initiation site. The folding seems to start with a collapse into native-like topologies, at least in parts, and is followed by formation of secondary and tertiary structure, perhaps by cooperative rearrangements. The motional characteristics of the protein show sequence-dependent variation as the concentration of urea is progressively reduced. At the sub-nanosecond level, the features are extremely unusual for denatured states, and only certain segments corresponding to the flexible regions in the native protein display these motions at the different concentrations of urea.  相似文献   

10.
The structural and functional aspects of ervatamin B were studied in solution. Ervatamin B belongs to the alpha + beta class of proteins. The intrinsic fluorescence emission maximum of the enzyme was at 350 nm under neutral conditions, and at 355 nm under denaturing conditions. Between pH 1.0- 2.5 the enzyme exists in a partially unfolded state with minimum or no tertiary structure, and no proteolytic activity. At still lower pH, the enzyme regains substantial secondary structure, which is predominantly a beta-sheet conformation and shows a strong binding to 8-anilino-1- napthalene-sulfonic acid (ANS). In the presence of salt, the enzyme attains a similar state directly from the native state. Under neutral conditions, the enzyme was stable in urea, while the guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) induced equilibrium unfolding was cooperative. The GuHCl induced unfolding transition curves at pH 3.0 and 4.0 were non-coincidental, indicating the presence of intermediates in the unfolding pathway. This was substantiated by strong ANS binding that was observed at low concentrations of GuHCl at both pH 3.0 and 4.0. The urea induced transition curves at pH 3.0 were, however, coincidental, but non-cooperative. This indicates that the different structural units of the enzyme unfold in steps through intermediates. This observation is further supported by two emission maxima in ANS binding assay during urea denaturation. Hence, denaturant induced equilibrium unfolding pathway of ervatamin B, which differs from the acid induced unfolding pathway, is not a simple two-state transition but involves intermediates which probably accumulate at different stages of protein folding and hence adds a new dimension to the unfolding pathway of plant proteases of the papain superfamily.  相似文献   

11.
Kinetically stable homodimeric serine protease milin reveals high conformational stability against temperature, pH and chaotrope [urea, guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) and guanidine isothiocynate (GuSCN)] denaturation as probed by circular dichroism, fluorescence, differential scanning calorimetry and activity measurements. GuSCN induces complete unfolding in milin, whereas temperature, urea and GuHCl induce only partial unfolding even at low pH, through several intermediates with distinct characteristics. Some of these intermediates are partially active (viz. in urea and 2 M GuHCl at pH 7.0), and some exhibited strong ANS binding as well. All three tryptophans in the protein seem to be buried in a rigid, compact core as evident from intrinsic fluorescence measurements coupled to equilibrium unfolding experiments. The protein unfolds as a dimer, where the unfolding event precedes dimer dissociation as confirmed by hydrodynamic studies. The solution studies performed here along with previous biochemical characterization indicate that the protein has α-helix and β-sheet rich regions or structural domains that unfold independently, and the monomer association is isologous. The complex unfolding pathway of milin and the intermediates has been characterized. The physical, physiological and probable therapeutic importance of the results has been discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of deglycosylation on the physiological and functional organization of milin was studied under different denaturizing conditions. Trifluoromethanesulfonic acid mediated deglycosylation resulted in insoluble milin, which was found to be soluble only in 1.5 M GuHCl with native-like folded structure. Kinetic stability, proteolytic activity, and dimeric association were lost in deglycosylated milin. Urea-induced unfolding revealed two inactive, highly stable equilibrium intermediates at pH 7.0 and pH 2.0. These intermediates were stable between 5.5–6.5 and 5.0–6.0 M total chaotropes (urea + 1.5 M GuHCl) at pH 7.0 and pH 2.0, respectively. GuHCl-induced unfolding was cooperative and noncoincidental with a broad transition range (2.0–5.0 M) at pH 7.0 and pH 2.0. Equilibrium unfolding of deglycosylated milin by urea and GuHCl substantiates the involvement of various inactive monomeric intermediates. This study provides a way to understand the role of glycosylation in the unfolding mechanism, stability, and functional activity of the serine protease milin.  相似文献   

13.
V Bhakuni  D Xie  E Freire 《Biochemistry》1991,30(20):5055-5060
The structural stability and domain structure of the pentameric B-subunit of cholera toxin have been measured as a function of different perturbants in order to assess the magnitude of the interactions within the B-subunits. For these studies, temperature, guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl), and pH were used as perturbants, and the effects were measured by high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry, isothermal reaction calorimetry, fluorescence spectroscopy, and partial protease digestion. At pH 7.5 and in the absence of any additional perturbants, the thermal unfolding of the B-subunit pentamer is characterized by a single peak in the heat capacity function centered at 77 degrees C and characterized by a delta Hcal of 328 kcal/mol of B-subunit pentamer and delta Hvh/delta Hcal of 0.3. Lowering the pH down to 4 or adding GuHCl up to 2 M results in a decrease of the calorimetric enthalpy with no significant effect on the van't Hoff enthalpy. The transition enthalpy decreases in a sigmoidal fashion with pH, with an inflection point centered at pH 5.3. Isothermal titration calorimetric studies as a function of pH also report a transition centered at pH 5.3 and characterized by an enthalpy change of 27 kcal/mol of B-subunit pentamer at 27 degrees C. Below this pH, the enthalpy change for the unfolding transition is reduced to approximately 100 kcal/mol of B-subunit pentamer. Similar behavior is obtained with GuHCl. In this case, a first transition is observed at 0.5 M GuHCl and a second one at 3 M GuHCl.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
G Ramsay  E Freire 《Biochemistry》1990,29(37):8677-8683
The temperature and guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) dependence of the structural stability of diphtheria toxin has been investigated by high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry. In 50 mM phosphate buffer at pH 8.0 and in the absence of GuHCl, the thermal unfolding of diphtheria toxin is characterized by a transition temperature (Tm) of 54.9 degrees C, a calorimetric enthalpy change (delta H) of 295 kcal/mol, and a van't Hoff to calorimetric enthalpy ratio of 0.57. Increasing the GuHCl concentration lowers the transition temperature and the calorimetric enthalpy change. At the same time, the van't Hoff to calorimetric enthalpy ratio increases until it reaches a value of 1 at 0.3 M GuHCl and remains constant thereafter. At low GuHCl concentrations (0-0.3 M), the thermal unfolding of diphtheria toxin is characterized by the presence of two transitions corresponding to the A and B domains of the protein. At higher GuHCl concentrations (0.3-1 M), the A domain is unfolded at all temperatures, and only one transition corresponding to the B domain is observed. Under these conditions, the most stable protein conformation at low temperatures is a partially folded state in which the A domain is unfolded and the B domain folded. A general model that explicitly considers the energetics of domain interactions has been developed in order to account for the stability and cooperative behavior of diphtheria toxin. It is shown that this cooperative domain interaction model correctly accounts for the temperature location as well as the shape and area of the calorimetric curves. Under physiological conditions, domain-domain interactions account for most of the structural stability of the A domain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Liu CP  Li ZY  Huang GC  Perrett S  Zhou JM 《Biochimie》2005,87(11):1023-1031
Trigger factor (TF) is an important catalyst of nascent peptide folding and possesses both peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase) and chaperone activities. TF has a modular structure, containing three domains with distinct structural and functional properties. The guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) induced unfolding of TF was investigated by monitoring Trp fluorescence, far-UV CD, second-derivative UV absorption, enzymatic and chaperone activities, chemical crosslinking and binding of the hydrophobic dye, 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonate (ANS); and was compared to the urea induced unfolding. The native state of TF was found to bind ANS in 1:1 stoichiometry with a K(d) of 84 microM. A native-like state, N', is stable around 0.5 M GuHCl, and shows increased ANS binding, while retaining PPIase activity and most secondary and tertiary structure, but loses chaperone and dimerization activities, consistent with slight conformational rearrangement. A compact denatured state, I, is populated around 1.0 M GuHCl, is inactive and does not show significant binding to ANS. The data suggest that TF unfolds in a stepwise manner, consistent with its modular structure. The ability of TF to undergo structural rearrangement to maintain enzymatic activity while reducing chaperone and dimerization abilities may be related to the physiological function of TF.  相似文献   

16.
The urea-induced unfolding of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase (alphaTS) from Escherichia coli, an eight-stranded (beta/alpha)(8) TIM barrel protein, has been shown to involve two stable equilibrium intermediates, I1 and I2, well populated at approximately 3 M and 5 M urea, respectively. The characterization of the I1 intermediate by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy has shown that I1 retains a significant fraction of the native ellipticity; the far-UV CD signal for the I2 species closely resembles that of the fully unfolded form. To obtain detailed insight into the disruption of secondary structure in the urea-induced unfolding process, a hydrogen exchange-mass spectrometry study was performed on alphaTS. The full-length protein was destabilized in increasing concentration of urea, the amide hydrogen atoms were pulse-labeled with deuterium, the labeled samples were quenched in acid and the products were analyzed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Consistent with the CD results, the I1 intermediate protects up to approximately 129 amide hydrogen atoms against exchange while the I2 intermediate offers no protection. Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry analysis of the peptic fragments derived from alphaTS labeled at 3 M urea indicates that most of the region between residues 12-130, which constitutes the first four beta strands and three alpha helices, (beta/alpha)(1-3)beta(4), is structured. The (beta/alpha)(1-3)beta(4) module appears to represent the minimum sub-core of stability of the I1 intermediate. A 4+2+2 folding model is proposed as a likely alternative to the earlier 6+2 folding mechanism for alphaTS.  相似文献   

17.
Lah J  Prislan I  Krzan B  Salobir M  Francky A  Vesnaver G 《Biochemistry》2005,44(42):13883-13892
Human erythropoietin (EPO) is a glycoprotein hormone considered to be the principal regulator of red blood cell formation. Although its recombinant version (rEPO) has been widely used for treatment of various anemias and its biological effects are relatively well-known, we know little about its biophysical properties and their relation to its structure. To gain a fuller understanding of the structural and functional properties of rEPO on the molecular level we followed its thermal and urea-induced unfolding at different pH (3.1-9.4) and urea concentrations (0-8 M) using spectropolarimetry, UV absorption, intrinsic emission fluorescence, and differential scanning calorimetry. Our results show that under a variety of conditions rEPO undergoes thermal or urea-induced denaturation that may be considered as a reversible two-state process characterized by unusually high (thermal) or moderate (urea-induced) extent of the residual structure. The highest thermal stability of the protein observed in aqueous solutions at physiological pH appears to be due to the largest difference in the extent of structure in the denatured and native state at this pH. The comparison between experimentally determined energetics of rEPO denaturation and its structure-based calculations indicates that the parametrization of thermodynamic quantities in terms of changes in solvent accessible nonpolar and polar surface areas resulting from protein unfolding can be successfully used provided that these changes are estimated from combination of experimentally determined deltaC(o)p and deltaH(o) values and not calculated from the structure of the protein's folded and assumingly fully unfolded state.  相似文献   

18.
The structural characteristics of exclusive equilibrium molten globule-like intermediate formed during peanut lectin unfolding in urea and guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) have been investigated by size-exclusion chromatography, circular dichroism, fluorescence, phosphorescence, and chemical modification. The elution behavior and 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate binding indicate a less compact tertiary structure in urea than in GdnHCl. Further, the urea-induced intermediate reveals perturbed, nonnative typical β-sheet conformation in contrast to native-like atypical β-structure in GdnHCl. N-bromosuccinimide oxidation shows that none of three tryptophan residues is modified for GdnHCl-induced intermediate while one gets oxidized in urea. Such difference in tryptophan environment is supported by acrylamide quenching (Stern-Volmer constant being 3.2 and 5.8 M(-1) respectively), and phosphorescence studies at 77 K which show a blue-shift of (0, 0) band from 412.4 nm (GdnHCl) to 411.4 nm (urea). These results may provide important insight into the differential effects of GdnHCl and urea on the structural characteristics of intermediate state(s) in protein folding.  相似文献   

19.
Using environment-sensitive fluorescence of 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid, polarization of fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate-labeled FtsZ, and far-UV circular dichroism spectroscopy, the chemical unfolding of FtsZ was found to proceed through two steps. The first step of the urea-induced unfolding produced an intermediate, which then unfolded at higher concentrations of urea. The intermediate state contains native-like secondary structure and much less tertiary structure compared with the native state. It is distinct from the native state as well as from the unfolded state. Similar to urea-induced unfolding of FtsZ, thermal unfolding of FtsZ also occurs in two steps. The midpoints for the first and second thermal unfolding transitions were found to be 38 +/- 4 and 77 +/- 5 degrees C, respectively. Further, the functional properties of FtsZ are extremely sensitive to urea, guanidium chloride, and sodium dodecyl sulfate. For example, 50% inhibition of the FtsZ assembly and GTP hydrolysis occurred at 0.1 and 0.2 m of urea, respectively. FtsZ lost its functional properties before any significant perturbation in the secondary or tertiary structure was detected by using several fluorescence techniques and far UV-CD indicating preferential local unfolding of the functional region(s). In addition, the unfolded FtsZ regains its ability to polymerize fully upon removal of urea. The data taken together suggest that FtsZ unfolds reversibly through a multistep process, and local responses that inhibit functional properties precede the global transition of FtsZ to the unfolded state.  相似文献   

20.
T Sugawara  K Kuwajima  S Sugai 《Biochemistry》1991,30(10):2698-2706
The urea-induced unfolding of staphylococcal nuclease A has been studied by circular dichroism both at equilibrium and by the kinetics of unfolding and refolding (pH 7.0 and 4.5 degrees C), as a function of Ca2+ and thymidine 3',5'-diphosphate (pdTp) concentration. The results are as follows. (1) The unfolding transition is shifted to higher concentrations of urea by Ca2+ and pdTp, and the presence of both ligands further stabilizes the protein. (2) In the first stage of kinetic refolding, the peptide ellipticity changes rapidly within the dead time of stopped-flow measurement (15 ms), indicating accumulation of a transient intermediate. This intermediate is remarkably less stable than those of other globular proteins previously studied. (3) Dependence of the folding and unfolding rate constants on urea concentration indicates that the critical activated state of folding ("transition state") has considerable structural organization. The transition state does not, however, have the capacity to bind Ca2+ and pdTp, as indicated by the effects of these ligands on the unfolding rate constant. (4) There are at least four different phases in the refolding kinetics in native conditions below 1 M urea. In the absence of pdTp, there are two phases in unfolding, while in the presence of pdTp the unfolding kinetics show a single phase. Some characteristics of the transient intermediate and of the transition state for folding are discussed.  相似文献   

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