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1.
To understand general aspects of stability and folding of c-type cytochromes, we have studied the folding characteristics of cytochrome c553 from Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough). This cytochrome is structurally similar but lacks sequence homology to other heme proteins; moreover, it has an abnormally low reduction potential. Unfolding of oxidized and reduced cytochrome c553 by guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) was monitored by circular dichroism (CD) and Soret absorption; the same unfolding curves were obtained with both methods supporting that cytochrome c553 unfolds by an apparent two-state process. Reduced cytochrome c553 is 7(3) kJ/mol more stable than the oxidized form; accordingly, the reduction potential of unfolded cytochrome c553 is 100(20) mV more negative than that of the folded protein. In contrast to many other unfolded cytochrome c proteins, upon unfolding at pH 7.0 both oxidized and reduced heme in cytochrome c553 become high-spin. The lack of heme misligation in unfolded cytochrome c553 implies that its unfolded structure is less constrained than those of cytochromes c with low-spin, misligated hemes.  相似文献   

2.
We have studied the unfolding reaction of cytochrome f from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Cytochrome f is different from all other c-type heme proteins in that it is a large, two-domain protein with predominantly beta-sheet structure. Moreover, the sixth axial ligand to the heme-iron is unique in cytochrome f: it is provided by the N-terminal alpha-amino group. Unfolding of oxidized and reduced cytochrome f by guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) was monitored by far-UV circular dichroism (CD), Soret absorption, and tyrosine emission: the same unfolding curves were obtained regardless of method. Neither oxidized nor reduced unfolded cytochrome f can be refolded at neutral pH. At pH 3.5 refolding takes place (upon dilution to lower denaturant concentrations or by electron injection to the unfolded, oxidized form), although the reaction is extremely slow. Reduced cytochrome f appears much more resistant towards denaturant perturbation than the oxidized form (in pH range 7-3.5). The heme in unfolded cytochrome f remains low-spin to pH 4 but turns high-spin at pH 3.5 (presumably due to protonation of the N-terminal amino group). Our results suggest that the unfolding process for cytochrome f is complex, involving kinetically trapped intermediates not resolvable by spectroscopy.  相似文献   

3.
Kristinsson R  Bowler BE 《Biochemistry》2005,44(7):2349-2359
Thermodynamic communication between protein substructures has been investigated by determining the stabilizing effect of mutations at position 52 in the least stable, N-yellow, substructure of cytochrome c on the second least stable, Red, and most stable, Blue, substructures of the protein. A Lys 73 --> His (H73) variant of iso-1-cytochrome c, containing these mutations was used to measure the stability of the Red substructure of cytochrome c through the pH and guanidine hydrochloride (gdnHCl) dependence of the His 73-mediated alkaline conformational transition. The stability of the Blue substructure was measured by global unfolding with gdnHCl and increased by 1 to 3.5 kcal/mol versus the H73 variant. The data demonstrate that the increase in stability of the Red substructure is similar to the increase in global stability, consistent with upward propagation of stabilizing energy from less (N-yellow) to more stable (Red and Blue) protein substructures. The result also supports sequential rather than independent unfolding of the N-yellow and Red substructures of cytochrome c. The data indicate that a leucine at position 52 alters the nature of partial unfolding of the Red substructure, a surprising effect for a single-site mutation. For all variants, the thermodynamics of formation of the Lys 79 alkaline state, which does not unfold the entire Red substructure, shows less stabilization of the portion of the protein unfolded relative to the stabilization of the Blue substructure, indicating that propagation of energy between substructures is somewhat disrupted when unfolding does not correspond to a natural substructure.  相似文献   

4.
The low-pH conformational equilibria of ferric yeast iso-1 cytochrome c (ycc) and its M80A, M80A/Y67H, and M80A/Y67A variants were studied from pH 7 to 2 at low ionic strength through electronic absorption, magnetic circular dichroism, and resonance Raman spectroscopies. For wild-type ycc, the protein structure, axial heme ligands, and spin state of the iron atom convert from the native folded His/Met low-spin (LS) form to a molten globule His/H(2)O high-spin (HS) form and a totally unfolded bis-aquo HS state, in a single cooperative transition with an apparent pK(a) of ~3.0. An analogous cooperative transition occurs for the M80A and M80A/Y67H variants. This is preceded by protonation of heme propionate-7, with a pK(a) of ~4.2, and by an equilibrium between a His/OH(-)-ligated LS and a His/H(2)O-ligated HS conformer, with a pK(a) of ~5.9. In the M80A/Y67A variant, the cooperative low-pH transition is split into two distinct processes because of an increased stability of the molten globule state that is formed at higher pH values than the other species. These data show that removal of the axial methionine ligand does not significantly alter the mechanism of acidic unfolding and the ranges of stability of low-pH conformers. Instead, removal of a hydrogen bonding partner at position 67 increases the stability of the molten globule and renders cytochrome c more susceptible to acid unfolding. This underlines the key role played by Tyr67 in stabilizing the three-dimensional structure of cytochrome c by means of the hydrogen bonding network connecting the Ω loops formed by residues 71-85 and 40-57.  相似文献   

5.
Although point mutations usually lead to minor localized changes in protein structure, replacement of conserved Pro-76 with Gly in iso-2-cytochrome c induces a major conformational change. The change in structure results from mutation-induced depression of the pK for transition to an alkaline conformation with altered heme ligation. To assess the importance of position 76 in stabilizing the native versus the alkaline structure, the equilibrium and kinetic properties of the pH-induced conformational change have been compared for normal and mutant iso-2-cytochrome c. The pKapp for the conformational change is reduced from 8.45 (normal iso-2) to 6.71 in the mutant protein (Gly-76 iso-2), suggesting that conservation of Pro-76 may be required to stabilize the native conformation at physiological pH. The kinetics of the conformational change for both the normal and mutant proteins are well-described by a single kinetic phase throughout most of the pH-induced transition zone. Over this pH range, a minimal mechanism proposed for horse cytochrome c [Davis, L. A., Schejter, A., & Hess, G. P. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 2624-2632] is consistent with the data for normal and mutant yeast iso-2-cytochromes c: NH KH----N + H+ kcf in equilibrium kcb A NH and N are native forms of cytochrome c with a 695-nm absorbance band, A is an alkaline form that lacks the 695-nm band, KH is a proton dissociation constant, and kcf and kcb are microscopic rate constants for the conformational change. The Gly-76 mutation increases kcf by almost 70-fold, but kcb and KH are unchanged.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
L C Wood  T B White  L Ramdas  B T Nall 《Biochemistry》1988,27(23):8562-8568
As a test of the proline isomerization model, we have used oligonucleotide site-directed mutagenesis to construct a mutant form of iso-2-cytochrome c in which proline-76 is replaced by glycine [Wood, L. C., Muthukrishnan, K., White, T. B., Ramdas, L., & Nall, B. T. (1988) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. For the oxidized form of Gly-76 iso-2, an estimate of stability by guanidine hydrochloride induced unfolding indicates that the mutation destabilizes the protein by 1.2 kcal/mol under standard conditions of neutral pH and 20 degrees C (delta G degrees u = 3.8 kcal/mol for normal Pro-76 iso-2 versus 2.6 kcal/mol for Gly-76 iso-2). The kinetics of folding/unfolding have been monitored by fluorescence changes throughout the transition region using stopped-flow mixing. The rates for fast and slow fluorescence-detected refolding are unchanged, while fast unfolding is increased in rate 3-fold in the mutant protein compared to normal iso-2. A new kinetic phase in the 1-s time range is observed in fluorescence-detected unfolding of the mutant protein. The presence of the new phase is correlated with the presence of species with an altered folded conformation in the initial conditions, suggesting assignment of the phase to unfolding of this species. The fluorescence-detected and absorbance-detected slow folding phases have been monitored as a function of final pH by manual mixing between pH 5.5 and 8 (0.3 M guanidine hydrochloride, 20 degrees C).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Weng J  Tan C  Shen JR  Yu Y  Zeng X  Xu C  Ruan K 《Biochemistry》2004,43(16):4855-4861
In this paper, we analyzed the pH-induced changes in the conformational states of the manganese-stabilizing protein (MSP) of photosystem II. Distinct conformational states of MSP were identified using fluorescence spectra, far-UV circular dichroism, and pressure-induced unfolding at varying suspension pH values, and four different conformational states of MSP were clearly distinguished using the center of fluorescence spectra mass when suspension pH was altered from 2 to 12. MSP was completely unfolded at a suspension pH above 11 and partly unfolded below a pH of 3. Analysis of the center of fluorescence spectral mass showed that the MSP structure appears stably folded around pH 6 and 4. The conformational state of MSP at pH 4 seems more stable than that at pH 6. Studies of peak positions of tryptophan fluorescence and MSP-bound 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid fluorescence spectra supported this observation. A decrease in the suspension pH to 2 resulted in significant alterations in the MSP structure possibly because of protonation of unprotonated residues at lower pH, suggesting the existence of a large number of unprotonated amino acid residues at neutral pH possibly useful for proton transport in oxygen evolution. The acidic pH-induced conformational changes of MSP were reversible upon increase of pH to neutral pH; however, N-bromosuccinimide modification of tryptophan (Trp241) blocks the recovery of pH-induced conformational changes in MSP, implying that Trp241 is a key residue for the unfolded protein to form a functional structure. Thus, pH-induced structural changes of stable MSP (pH 6-4) may be utilized to analyze its functionality as a cofactor for oxygen evolution.  相似文献   

8.
Equilibrium unfolding of class pi glutathione S-transferase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The equilibrium unfolding transition of class pi glutathione S-transferase, a homodimeric protein, from porcine lung was monitored by spectroscopic methods (fluorescence emission and ultraviolet absorption), and by enzyme activity changes. Solvent (guanidine hydrochloride and urea)-induced denaturation is well described by a two-state model involving significant populations of only the folded dimer and unfolded monomer. Neither a folded, active monomeric form nor stable unfolding intermediates were detected. The conformational stability, delta Gu (H2O), of the native dimer was estimated to be about 25.3 +/- 2 kcal/mol at 20 degrees C and pH6.5.  相似文献   

9.
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy is employed to characterize unfolding intermediates and the denatured state of horse ferricytochrome c in guanidine hydrochloride. Unfolded and partially unfolded species with non-native heme ligation are detected by analysis of hyperfine-shifted (1)H resonances. Two equilibrium unfolding intermediates with His-Lys heme axial ligation are detected, as are two unfolded species with bis-His heme ligation. These results are contrasted with previous results on horse ferricytochrome c denaturation by urea, for which only one unfolding intermediate and one unfolded species were detected by NMR spectroscopy. Urea and guanidine hydrochloride are often used interchangeably in protein denaturation studies, but these results and those of others indicate that unfolded and intermediate states in these two denaturants may have substantially different properties. Implications of these results for folding studies and the biological function of mitochondrial cytochromes c are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The changes in the free energy of the denatured state of a set of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c variants with single surface histidine residues have been measured in 3 M guanidine hydrochloride. The thermodynamics of unfolding by guanidine hydrochloride is also reported. All variants have decreased stability relative to the wild-type protein. The free energy of the denatured state was determined in 3 M guanidine hydrochloride by evaluating the strength of heme-histidine ligation through determination of the pK(a) for loss of histidine binding to the heme. The data are corrected for the presence of the N-terminal amino group which also ligates to the heme under similar solution conditions. Significant deviations from random coil behavior are observed. Relative to a variant with a single histidine at position 26, residual structure of the order of -1.0 to -2.5 kcal/mol is seen for the other variants studied. The data explain the slower folding of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c relative to the horse protein. The greater number of histidines and the greater strength of ligation are expected to slow conversion of the histidine-misligated forms to the obligatory aquo-heme intermediate during the ligand exchange phase of folding. The particularly strong association of histidine residues at positions 54 and 89 may indicate regions of the protein with strong energetic propensities to collapse against the heme during early folding events, consistent with available data in the literature on early folding events for cytochrome c.  相似文献   

11.
Fast folding of cytochrome c.   总被引:5,自引:5,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Native iso-2 cytochrome c contains two residues (His 18, Met 80) coordinated to the covalently attached heme. On unfolding of iso-2, the His 18 ligand remains coordinated to the heme iron, whereas Met 80 is displaced by a non-native heme ligand, His 33 or His 39. To test whether non-native His-heme ligation slows folding, we have constructed a double mutant protein in which the non-native ligands are replaced by asparagine and lysine, respectively (H33N,H39K iso-2). The double mutant protein, which cannot form non-native histidine-heme coordinate bonds, folds significantly faster than normal iso-2 cytochrome c: gamma = 14-26 ms for H33N,H39K iso-2 versus gamma = 200-1,100 ms for iso-2. These results with iso-2 cytochrome c strongly support the hypothesis that non-native His-heme ligation results in a kinetic barrier to fast folding of cytochrome c. Assuming that the maximum rate of a conformational search is about 10(11) s-1, the results imply that the direct folding pathway of iso-2 involves passage through on the order of 10(9) or fewer partially folded conformers.  相似文献   

12.
N52I iso-2 cytochrome c is a variant of yeast iso-2 cytochrome c in which asparagine substitutes for isoleucine 52 in an alpha helical segment composed of residues 49-56. The N52I substitution results in a significant increase in both stability and cooperativity of equilibrium unfolding, and acts as a "global suppressor" of destabilizing mutations. The equilibrium m-value for denaturant-induced unfolding of N52I iso-2 increases by 30%, a surprisingly large amount for a single residue substitution. The folding/unfolding kinetics for N52I iso-2 have been measured by stopped-flow mixing and by manual mixing, and are compared to the kinetics of folding/unfolding of wild-type protein, iso-2 cytochrome c. The results show that the observable folding rate and the guanidine hydrochloride dependence of the folding rate are the same for iso-2 and N52I iso-2, despite the greater thermodynamic stability of N52I iso-2. Thus, there is no linear free-energy relationship between mutation-induced changes in stability and observable refolding rates. However, for N52I iso-2 the unfolding rate is slower and the guanidine hydrochloride dependence of the unfolding rate is smaller than for iso-2. The differences in the denaturant dependence of the unfolding rates suggest that the N52I substitution decreases the change in the solvent accessible hydrophobic surface between the native state and the transition state. Two aspects of the results are inconsistent with a two-state folding/unfolding mechanism and imply the presence of folding intermediates: (1) observable refolding rate constants calculated from the two-state mechanism by combining equilibrium data and unfolding rate measurements deviate from the observed refolding rate constants; (2) kinetically unresolved signal changes ("burst phase") are observed for both N52I iso-2 and iso-2 refolding. The "burst phase" amplitude is larger for N52I iso-2 than for iso-2, suggesting that the intermediates formed during the "burst phase" are stabilized by the N52I substitution.  相似文献   

13.
Effective concentrations of amino acid side chains in an unfolded protein.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
K Muthukrishnan  B T Nall 《Biochemistry》1991,30(19):4706-4710
Preferential interactions between chain segments are studied in unfolded cytochrome c. The method takes advantage of heme ligation in the unfolded protein, a feature unique to proteins with covalently attached heme. The approach allows estimation of the effective concentration of one polypeptide chain segment relative to another, and is successful in detecting differences for peptide chain segments separated by different numbers of residues in the linear sequence. The method uses proton NMR spectroscopy to monitor displacement of the histidine heme ligands by imidazole as guanidine hydrochloride unfolded cytochrome c is titrated with deuterated imidazole. When the imidazole concentration exceeds the effective (local) concentration of histidine ligands, the protein ligands are displaced by deuterated imidazole. On displacement, the histidine ring proton resonances move from the paramagnetic region of the spectrum to the diamagnetic region. Titrations have been carried out for members of the mitochondrial cytochrome c family that contain different numbers of histidine residues. These include cytochromes c from tuna (2), yeast iso-2 (3), and yeast iso-1-MS (4). At high imidazole concentration, the number of proton resonances that appear in the histidine ring C2H region of the NMR spectrum is one less than the number of histidine residues in the protein. So one histidine, probably His-18, remains as a heme ligand. The effective local concentrations of histidines-26, -33, and -39 relative to the heme (position 14-17) are estimated to be (3-16) X 10(-3) M.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
B T Nall 《Biochemistry》1986,25(10):2974-2978
Titration to high pH converts yeast iso-2 cytochrome c to an inactive but more stable alkaline form lacking a 695-nm absorbance band [Osterhout, J. J., Jr., Muthukrishnan, K., & Nall, B. T. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 6680-6684]. The kinetics of absorbance-detected refolding of the alkaline form have been measured by dilution of guanidine hydrochloride in a stopped-flow instrument. Fast-folding species (tau 2) are detected, as in refolding to the native state at neutral pH. An additional kinetic phase (tau a) is observed with an amplitude opposite in sign to the fast phase. The amplitude of this phase increases and the rate increases with increasing pH. Comparison to pH-jump measurements of the fully folded protein shows that phase tau a has the same sign, rate, and pH dependence as the alkaline isomerization reaction, suggesting that this new phase involves isomerization of native or nativelike species following fast folding. Absorbance difference spectra are taken at 5-s intervals during refolding at high pH. The spectra verify that nativelike species--with a 695-nm absorbance band--are formed transiently, before conversion of the protein to the alkaline form. Refolding in the presence of ascorbate shows that the transient, nativelike species are reducible, unlike alkaline iso-2. Thus, (1) refolding to the alkaline form of iso-2 cytochrome c proceeds through transient native or nativelike species, and (2) a folding pathway leading to native or nativelike forms is maintained at high pH, where native species are no longer the thermodynamically favored product.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Erythropoietin is a glycoprotein hormone that stimulates the maturation of late erythroid progenitor cells. It has three N-linked and one O-linked carbohydrates which play an important role in the biosynthesis and biological activities of the protein. To determine the role the carbohydrate might have in maintaining the conformational stability of the protein, the protein expressed in mammalian cells (fully glycosylated), the asialo mammalian-expressed protein, and the protein expressed in Escherichia coli (no carbohydrate) were compared for their stability to guanidine HCl, pH, and temperature. Circular dichroism was used to follow protein unfolding. Both the intact and asialo mammalian-expressed proteins unfolded with a cooperative transition in guanidine HCl, with a midpoint at 1.75 M guanidine HCl. The E. coli-expressed material unfolded with a midpoint of 1.2 M guanidine HCl, and a delta G of unfolding which was 1.4 kcal/mol less than that of the two glycosylated molecules. The E. coli-derived protein was also significantly less stable to pH-induced conformational changes, showing a cooperative transition in 35% glycerol with a midpoint at pH 4.4, while both the intact and asialo mammalian-expressed molecules had a transition midpoint of pH 3.75 in the absence of glycerol, and approximately pH 3 in the presence of 35% glycerol. The E. coli-expressed molecule unfolded and precipitated upon heating to 44 degrees C, while the asialo and intact mammalian-expressed proteins remained soluble, with a Tm of 56 degrees C. From these experiments, the carbohydrate appears to play a critical role in stabilizing the erythropoietin molecule to denaturing conditions, and this increased stability does not depend on the presence of sialic acid.  相似文献   

16.
The oxidized state of cytochrome c is a subject of continuous interest, owing to the multitude of conformations which the protein can adopt in solution and on surfaces of artificial and cell membranes. The structural diversity corresponds to a variety of functions in electron transfer, peroxidase and apoptosis processes. In spite of numerous studies, a comprehensive analysis and comparison of native and non-native states of ferricytochrome c has thus far not been achieved. This results in part from the fact that the influence of solvent conditions (i.e., ionic strength, anion concentration, temperature dependence of pH values) on structure, function and equilibrium thermodynamics has not yet been thoroughly assessed. The current study is a first step in this direction, in that it provides the necessary experimental data to compare different non-native states adopted at high temperature and alkaline pH. To this end, we employed visible electronic circular dichroism (ECD) and absorption spectroscopy to probe structural changes of the heme environment in bovine and horse heart ferricytochrome c as a function of temperature between 278 and 363 K at different neutral and alkaline pH values. A careful selection of buffers enabled us to monitor the partial unfolding of the native state at room temperature while avoiding a change to an alkaline state at high temperatures. We found compelling evidence for the existence of a thermodynamic intermediate of the thermal unfolding/folding process, termed III h, which is structurally different from the alkaline states, IV 1 and IV 2, contrary to current belief. At neutral or slightly acidic pH, III h is populated in a temperature region between 320 and 345 K. The unfolded state of the protein becomes populated at higher temperatures. The ECD spectra of the B-bands of bovine and horse heart cytochrome c (pH 7.0) exhibit a pronounced couplet that is maintained below 343 K, before protein unfolding replaces it by a rather strong positive Cotton band. A preliminary vibronic analysis of the B-band profile reveals that the couplet reflects a B-band splitting of 350 cm (-1), which is mostly of electronic origin, due to the internal electric field in the heme cavity. Our results suggest that the conformational transition from the native state, III, into a thermally activated intermediate state, III h, does not substantially affect the internal electric field and causes only moderate rearrangements of the heme pocket, which involves changes, rather than a rupture, of the Fe (3+)-M80 linkage. In the unfolded state, as well as in the alkaline states IV and V, the band splitting is practically eliminated, but the positive Cotton effect observed for the B-band suggests that the proximal environment, encompassing H18 and the two cysteine residues 14 and 17, is most likely still intact and covalently bound to the heme chromophore. Both alkaline states IV and V were found to melt via intermediate states. Unfolded states probed at neutral and alkaline pH can be discriminated, owing to the different intensities of the Cotton bands of the respective B-band transitions. Differences between the ECD intensities of the B-bands of the different unfolded states and alkaline states most likely reflect different degrees of openness of the corresponding heme crevice.  相似文献   

17.
Prothymosin alpha has previously been shown to be unfolded at neutral pH, thus belonging to a growing family of "natively unfolded" proteins. The structural properties and conformational stability of recombinant human prothymosin alpha were characterized at neutral and acidic pH by gel filtration, SAXS, circular dichroism, ANS fluorescence, (1)H NMR, and resistance to urea-induced unfolding. Interestingly, prothymosin alpha underwent a cooperative transition from the unfolded state into a partially folded conformation on lowering the pH. This conformation of prothymosin alpha is a compact denatured state, with structural properties different from those of the molten globule. The formation of alpha-helical structure by the glutamic acid-rich elements of the protein accompanied by the partial hydrophobic collapse is expected at lower pH due to the neutralization of the negatively charged residues. It is possible that such conformational changes may be associated with the protein function.  相似文献   

18.
Equilibrium and kinetic folding studies of horse cytochrome c in the reduced state have been carried out under strictly anaerobic conditions at neutral pH, 10 degrees C, in the entire range of aqueous solubility of guanidinium hydrochloride (GdnHCl). Equilibrium unfolding transitions observed by Soret heme absorbance, excitation energy transfer from the lone tryptophan residue to the ferrous heme, and far-UV circular dichroism (CD) are all biphasic and superimposable, implying no accumulation of structural intermediates. The thermodynamic parameters obtained by two-state analysis of these transitions yielded DeltaG(H2O)=18.8(+/-1.45) kcal mol(-1), and C(m)=5.1(+/-0.15) M GdnHCl, indicating unusual stability of reduced cytochrome c. These results have been used in conjunction with the redox potential of native cytochrome c and the known stability of oxidized cytochrome c to estimate a value of -164 mV as the redox potential of the unfolded protein. Stopped-flow kinetics of folding and unfolding have been recorded by Soret heme absorbance, and tryptophan fluorescence as observables. The refolding kinetics are monophasic in the transition region, but become biphasic as moderate to strongly native-like conditions are approached. There also is a burst folding reaction unobservable in the stopped-flow time window. Analyses of the two observable rates and their amplitudes indicate that the faster of the two rates corresponds to apparent two-state folding (U<-->N) of 80-90 % of unfolded molecules with a time constant in the range 190-550 micros estimated by linear extrapolation and model calculations. The remaining 10-20 % of the population folds to an off-pathway intermediate, I, which is required to unfold first to the initial unfolded state, U, in order to refold correctly to the native state, N (I<-->U<-->N). The slower of the two observable rates, which has a positive slope in the linear functional dependence on the denaturant concentration indicating that an unfolding process under native-like conditions indeed exists, originates from the unfolding of I to U, which rate-limits the overall folding of these 10-20 % of molecules. Both fast and slow rates are independent of protein concentration and pH of the refolding milieu, suggesting that the off-pathway intermediate is not a protein aggregate or trapped by heme misligation. The nature or type of unfolded-state heme ligation does not interfere with refolding. Equilibrium pH titration of the unfolded state yielded coupled ionization of the two non-native histidine ligands, H26 and H33, with a pK(a) value of 5.85. A substantial fraction of the unfolded population persists as the six-coordinate form even at low pH, suggesting ligation of the two methionine residues, M65 and M80. These results have been used along with the known ligand-binding properties of unfolded cytochrome c to propose a model for heme ligation dynamics. In contrast to refolding kinetics, the unfolding kinetics of reduced cytochrome c recorded by observation of Soret absorbance and tryptophan fluorescence are all slow, simple, and single-exponential. In the presence of 6.8 M GdnHCl, the unfolding time constant is approximately 300(+/-125) ms. There is no burst unfolding reaction. Simulations of the observed folding-unfolding kinetics by numerical solutions of the rate equations corresponding to the three-state I<-->U<-->N scheme have yielded the microscopic rate constants.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of pH on the denatured state (3 M guanidine hydrochloride) was evaluated with fluorescence spectroscopy for four variants of iso-1-cytochrome c, AcTM (no surface histidines), AcH26 (surface histidine at position 26), AcH54 (surface histidine at position 54), and AcH54I52 (stabilizing I52 mutation added to AcH54). Changes in the compactness and the heme ligation of the denatured state, as a function of pH, were monitored through changes in Trp 59-heme fluorescence quenching. With the AcTM and AcH26 variants, no change in the fluorescence intensity occurs from pH 4 to 10. However, for the AcH54 and AcH54I52 variants the fluorescence intensity drops significantly between pH 4 and 6, consistent with His 54 binding to the heme of cytochrome c. Between pH 8 and 10 fluorescence intensity increases again, indicating that the His 54 is displaced from the heme. The data are consistent with lysines 4 and 5 being the primary heme ligands at alkaline pH, under denaturing conditions. This conclusion was confirmed by site-directed mutagenesis. Thermodynamic analysis indicates that heme-ligand affinity in the denatured state is controlled primarily by sequence position (loop size) and that when histidines are present they inhibit lysine ligation until approximately pH 8.5-9.0 as compared to pH 7.5 with the AcTM variant. Thus, at physiological pH, histidine ligands provide the primary constraint on the denatured state of cytochrome c. The heme-Trp 59 distance in the denatured state of iso-1-cytochrome c, derived from analysis by F?rster energy transfer theory, is approximately 26 A at pH 4 and 10, much shorter than the random coil prediction of 56 A. Surprisingly, the heme-Trp 59 distance in the His 54 bound conformation only drops to approximately 21 A, consistent with an extended conformation for the short polypeptide segment separating heme and Trp 59.  相似文献   

20.
IFABP is a small (15 kDa) protein consisting mostly of antiparallel beta-strands that surround a large cavity into which ligands bind. We have previously used FCS to show that the native protein, labeled with fluorescein, exhibits dynamic fluctuation with a relaxation time of 35 micros. Here we report the use of FCS to study the unfolding of the protein induced by guanidine hydrochloride. Although the application of this technique to measure diffusion coefficients and molecular dynamics is straightforward, the FCS results need to be corrected for both viscosity and refractive index changes as the guanidine hydrochloride concentration increases. We present here a detailed study of the effects of viscosity and refractive index of guanidine hydrochloride solutions to calibrate FCS data. After correction, the increase in the diffusion time of IFABP corresponds well with the unfolding transition monitored by far ultraviolet circular dichroism. We also show that the magnitude of the 35 micros phase, reflecting the conformational fluctuation in the native state, decreases sharply as the concentration of denaturant increases and the protein unfolds. Although FCS experiments indicate that the unfolded state at pH 2 is rather compact and native-like, the radius in the presence of guanidine hydrochloride falls well within the range expected for a random coil.  相似文献   

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