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1.
In the presence of moderate (2-4 M) urea concentrations the tetrameric enzyme, glycine N-methyltransferase (GNMT), dissociates into compact monomers. Higher concentrations of urea (7-8 M) promote complete denaturation of the enzyme. We report here that the H176N mutation in this enzyme, found in humans with hypermethioninaemia, significantly decreases stability of the tetramer, although H176 is located far from the intersubunit contact areas. Dissociation of the tetramer to compact monomers and unfolding of compact monomers of the mutant protein were detected by circular dichroism, quenching of fluorescence emission, size-exclusion chromatography, and enzyme activity. The values of apparent free energy of dissociation of tetramer and of unfolding of compact monomers for the H176N mutant (27.7 and 4.2 kcal/mol, respectively) are lower than those of wild-type protein (37.5 and 6.2 kcal/mol). A 2.7 A resolution structure of the mutant protein revealed no significant difference in the conformation of the protein near the mutated residue.  相似文献   

2.
Thermal unfolding of dodecameric manganese glutamine synthetase (622,000 M(r)) at pH 7 and approximately 0.02 ionic strength occurs in two observable steps: a small reversible transition (Tm approximately 42 degrees C; delta H approximately equal to 0.9 J/g) followed by a large irreversible transition (Tm approximately 81 degrees C; delta H approximately equal to 23.4 J/g) in which secondary structure is lost and soluble aggregates form. Secondary structure, hydrophobicity, and oligomeric structure of the equilibrium intermediate are the same as for the native protein, whereas some aromatic residues are more exposed. Urea (3 M) destabilizes the dodecamer (with a tertiary structure similar to that without urea at 55 degrees C) and inhibits aggregation accompanying unfolding at < or = 0.2 mg protein/mL. With increasing temperature (30-70 degrees C) or incubation times at 25 degrees C (5-35 h) in 3 M urea, only dodecamer and unfolded monomer are detected. In addition, the loss in enzyme secondary structure is pseudo-first-order (t1/2 = 1,030 s at 20.0 degrees C in 4.5 M urea). Differential scanning calorimetry of the enzyme in 3 M urea shows one endotherm (Tmax approximately 64 degrees C; delta H = 17 +/- 2 J/g). The enthalpy change for dissociation and unfolding agrees with that determined by urea titrations by isothermal calorimetry (delta H = 57 +/- 15 J/g; Zolkiewski M, Nosworthy NJ, Ginsburg A, 1995, Protein Sci 4: 1544-1552), after correcting for the binding of urea to protein sites exposed during unfolding (-42 J/g). Refolding and assembly to active enzyme occurs upon dilution of urea after thermal unfolding.  相似文献   

3.
Urea-induced unfolding of lipoxygenase-1 (LOX1) at pH 7.0 was followed by enzyme activity, spectroscopic measurements, and limited proteolysis experiments. Complete unfolding of LOX1 in 9 M urea in the presence of thiol reducing or thiol modifying reagents was observed. The aggregation and oxidative reactions prevented the reversible unfolding of the molecule. The loss of enzyme activity was much earlier than the structural loss of the molecule during the course of unfolding, with the midpoint concentrations being 4.5 and 7.0 M for activity and spectroscopic measurements, respectively. The equilibrium unfolding transition could be adequately fitted to a three-state, two-step model (N left arrow over right arrow I left arrow over right arrow U) and the intermediate fraction was maximally populated at 6.3 M urea. The free energy change (DeltaG(H(2)O)) for the unfolding of native (N) to intermediate (I) was 14.2 +/- 0.28 kcal/mol and for the intermediate to the unfolded state (U) was 11.9 +/- 0.12 kcal/mol. The ANS binding measurements as a function of urea concentration indicated that the maximum binding of ANS was in 6.3 M urea due to the exposure of hydrophobic groups; this intermediate showed significant amount of tertiary structure and retained nearly 60% of secondary structure. The limited proteolysis measurements showed that the initiation of unfolding was from the C-terminal domain. Thus, the stable intermediate observed could be the C-terminal domain unfolded with exposed hydrophobic domain-domain interface. Limited proteolysis experiments during refolding process suggested that the intermediate refolded prior to completely unfolded LOX1. These results confirmed the role of cysteine residues and domain-domain interactions in the reversible unfolding of LOX1. This is the first report of the reversible unfolding of a very large monomeric, multi-domain protein, which also has a prosthetic group.  相似文献   

4.
Jang do S  Lee HJ  Lee B  Hong BH  Cha HJ  Yoon J  Lim K  Yoon YJ  Kim J  Ree M  Lee HC  Choi KY 《FEBS letters》2006,580(17):4166-4171
Failure to detect the intermediate in spite of its existence often leads to the conclusion that two-state transition in the unfolding process of the protein can be justified. In contrast to the previous equilibrium unfolding experiment fitted to a two-state model by circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopies, an equilibrium unfolding intermediate of a dimeric ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) could be detected by small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and analytical ultracentrifugation. The sizes of KSI were determined to be 18.7A in 0M urea, 17.3A in 5.2M urea, and 25.1A in 7M urea by SAXS. The size of KSI in 5.2M urea was significantly decreased compared with those in 0M and 7M urea, suggesting the existence of a compact intermediate. Sedimentation velocity as obtained by ultracentrifugation confirmed that KSI in 5.2M urea is distinctly different from native and fully-unfolded forms. The sizes measured by pulse field gradient nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy were consistent with those obtained by SAXS. Discrepancy of equilibrium unfolding studies between size measurement methods and optical spectroscopies might be due to the failure in detecting the intermediate by optical spectroscopic methods. Further characterization of the intermediate using (1)H NMR spectroscopy and Kratky plot supported the existence of a partially-folded form of KSI which is distinct from those of native and fully-unfolded KSIs. Taken together, our results suggest that the formation of a compact intermediate should precede the association of monomers prior to the dimerization process during the folding of KSI.  相似文献   

5.
Snake venoms contain a large number of hemostatically active proteins that are structurally related to Ca(2+)-dependent animal lectins. These proteins, called C-type lectin-like proteins (CLPs), are generally found as heterodimers composed of two homologous subunits linked by a disulfide bond. Here, bothrojaracin (BJC), a CLP from Bothrops jararaca venom that is also a thrombin inhibitor, has been used as a model to study the subunit dissociation and unfolding of CLPs from snake venom. Dithiothreitol (DTT) up to 10 mM produces minor effects on the tertiary structure and activity of BJC. On the other hand, chromatographic studies and fluorescence polarization measurements indicate that the interchain disulfide bond is disrupted by DTT, although the dimeric association is maintained. Treatment of BJC with urea produces a progressive red shift in the emission spectra of the tryptophan residues, and circular dichroism measurements show that BJC retains significant secondary structure in the presence of 8 M urea, suggesting only partial unfolding. The effects of urea are fully reversible, as there is complete recovery of BJC activity after removal of the denaturing agent. Addition of DTT to a protein sample previously treated with 8 M urea produces a slightly larger spectral shift than that observed with urea alone. Furthermore, in this condition BJC loses its secondary structure, and its subunits are dissociated. After removal of urea and DTT, BJC is inactive toward thrombin, suggesting the irreversibility of their combined action. Altogether, our data show that (i) BJC is highly resistant to urea or DTT effects, requiring the simultaneous action of both agents to fully denature the protein, and (ii) BJC monomers are tightly associated, and the presence of DTT combined with high urea concentrations is necessary to disrupt them. On the basis of these results we propose the first denaturation model for a CLP from snake venom.  相似文献   

6.
We have examined the equilibrium unfolding of Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI (RNase H), a member of a family of enzymes that cleaves RNA from RNA:DNA hybrids. A completely synthetic gene was constructed that expresses a variant of the wild-type sequence with all 3 cysteines replaced with alanine. The resulting recombinant protein is active and folds reversibly. Denaturation studies monitored by circular dichroism and tryptophan fluorescence yield coincident curves that suggest the equilibrium unfolding reaction is a 2-state process. Acid denaturation, however, reveals a cooperative transition at approximately pH 1.8 to a partially folded state. This acid state can be further denatured in a reversible manner by the addition of heat or urea as monitored by either CD or tryptophan fluorescence. Analytical ultracentrifugation studies indicate that the acid state of RNase H is both compact and monomeric. Although compact, the acid state does not resemble the native protein: the acid state displays a near-UV CD spectrum similar to the unfolded state and binds to and enhances the fluorescence of the dye 1-anilinonaphthalene, 8-sulfonate much more than either the native or unfolded states. Therefore, the acid state of E. coli RNase H has the characteristics of a molten globule: it retains a high degree of secondary structure, remains compact, yet does not appear to contain a tightly packed core.  相似文献   

7.
Human phenylalanine hydroxylase was expressed and purified from Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with maltose-binding protein. After removal of the fusion partner, the effects of increasing urea concentrations on enzyme activity, aggregation, unfolding, and refolding were examined. At pH 7.50, purified human phenylalanine hydroxylase is transiently activated in the presence of 0-4 M urea but slowly inactivated at higher denaturant concentrations. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy showed that the enzyme is denatured through at least two distinct transitions. The presence of phenylalanine (L-Phe) shifts the transition midpoint of the first transition from 1.4 to 2.7 M urea, whereas the second transition is unaffected by this substrate. Apparently the free energy of denaturation was almost identical for the free enzyme and for the enzyme-substrate complex, but significant differences in dDeltaG(D)/d[urea] (m(D) values) were observed for the first denaturation transition. In the absence of substrate, a high rate of non-covalent aggregation was observed for the enzyme in the presence of 1-4 M urea. All three tryptophan residues in the enzyme (Trp-120, Trp-187, and Trp-326) were mutated to phenylalanine, either as single mutations or in combination, in order to identify the residues involved in the spectroscopic transitions. A gradual dissociation of the native tetrameric enzyme to increasingly denatured dimeric and monomeric forms was demonstrated by size exclusion chromatography in the presence of denaturants.  相似文献   

8.
The equilibrium unfolding of the major Physa acuta glutathione transferase isoenzyme (P. acuta GST(3)) has been performed using guanidinium chloride (GdmCl), urea, and acid denaturation to investigate the unfolding intermediates. Protein transitions were monitored by intrinsic fluorescence. The results indicate that unfolding of P. acuta GST(3) using GdmCl (0-3.0M) is a multistep process, i.e., three intermediates coexist in equilibrium. The first intermediate, a partially dissociated dimer, exists at low GdmCl concentration (approximately at 0.7M). At 1.2M GdmCl, a dimeric intermediate with a compact structure was observed. This intermediate undergoes dissociation into structural monomers at 1.75M of GdmCl. The monomeric intermediate started to be completely unfolding at higher GdmCl concentrations (>1.8M). Unfolding using urea (0-7.0M) and acid-induced structures as well as the fluorescence of 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate in the presence of different GdmCl concentrations confirmed that the unfolding is a multistep process. At concentrations of GdmCl or urea less than the midpoints or at the midpoint pH (pH 4.2-4.6), the unfolding transition is protein concentration independent and involved a change in the subunit tertiary structure yielding a partially active dimeric intermediate. The binding of glutathione to the enzyme active site stabilizes the native dimeric state.  相似文献   

9.
This research was undertaken to distinguish between local and global unfolding in the reversible thermal denaturation of bovine pancreatic ribonclease A (RNase A). Local unfolding was monitored by steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence of nine mutants in each of which a single tryptophan was substituted for a wild-type residue. Global unfolding was monitored by far-UV circular dichroism and UV absorbance. All the mutants (except F8W and D38W) exhibited high specific enzymatic activity, and their far-UV CD spectra were very close to that of wild-type RNase A, indicating that the tryptophan substitutions did not affect the structure of any of the mutants (excluding K1W and Y92W) under folding conditions at 20 degrees C. Like wild-type RNase A, the various mutants exhibited reversible cooperative thermal unfolding transitions at pH 5, with transition temperatures 2.5-11 degrees C lower than that of the wild-type transition, as detected by far-UV CD or UV absorbance. Even at 80 degrees C, well above the cooperative transition of all the RNase A mutants, a considerable amount of secondary and tertiary structure was maintained. These studies suggest the following two-stage mechanism for the thermal unfolding transition of RNase A as the temperature is increased. First, at temperatures lower than those of the main cooperative transition, long-range interactions within the major hydrophobic core are weakened, e.g., those involving residues Phe-8 (in the N-terminal helix) and Lys-104 and Tyr-115 (in the C-terminal beta-hairpin motif). The structure of the chain-reversal loop (residues 91-95) relaxes in the same temperature range. Second, the subsequent higher-temperature cooperative unfolding transition is associated with a loss of secondary structure and additional changes in the tertiary contacts of the major hydrophobic core, e.g., those involving residues Tyr-73, Tyr-76, and Asp-38 on the other side of the molecule. The hydrophobic interactions of the C-terminal loop of the protein are enhanced by high temperature, and perhaps are responsible for the preservation of the local structural environment of Trp-124 at temperatures slightly above the major cooperative transition. The results shed new light on the thermal unfolding transitions, generally supporting the thermal unfolding hypothesis of Burgess and Scheraga, as modified by Matheson and Scheraga.  相似文献   

10.
Noland BW  Dangott LJ  Baldwin TO 《Biochemistry》1999,38(49):16136-16145
Bacterial luciferase is a heterodimeric (alphabeta) enzyme composed of homologous subunits. When the Vibrio harveyi luxA gene is expressed in Escherichia coli, the alpha subunit accumulates to high levels. The alpha subunit has a well-defined near-UV circular dichroism spectrum and a higher intrinsic fluorescence than the heterodimer, demonstrating fluorescence quenching in the enzyme which is reduced in the free subunit [Sinclair, J. F., Waddle, J. J., Waddill, W. F., and Baldwin, T. O. (1993) Biochemistry 32, 5036-5044]. Analytical ultracentrifugation of the alpha subunit has revealed a reversible monomer to dimer equilibrium with a dissociation constant of 14.9 +/- 4.0 microM at 18 degrees C in 50 mM phosphate and 100 mM NaCl, pH 7.0. The alpha subunit unfolded and refolded reversibly in urea-containing buffers by a three-state mechanism. The first transition occurred over the range of 0-2 M urea with an associated free-energy change of 2.24 +/- 0.25 kcal/mol at 18 degrees C in 50 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. The second, occurring between 2.5 and 3.5 M urea, comprised a cooperative transition with a free-energy change of 6.50 +/- 0.75 kcal/mol. The intermediate species, populated maximally at ca. 2 M urea, has defined near-UV circular dichroism spectral properties distinct from either the native or the denatured states. The intrinsic fluorescence of the intermediate suggested that, although the quantum yield had decreased, the tryptophanyl residues remained largely buried. The far-UV circular dichroism spectrum of the intermediate indicated that it had lost ca. 40% of its native secondary structure. N-Terminal sequencing of the products of limited proteolysis of the intermediate showed that the C-terminal region of the alpha subunit became protease labile over the urea concentration range at which the intermediate was maximally populated. These observations have led us to propose an unfolding model in which the first transition is the unfolding of a C-terminal subdomain and the second transition represents the unfolding of a more stable N-terminal subdomain. Comparison of the structural properties of the unfolding intermediate using spectroscopic probes and limited proteolysis of the alpha subunit with those of the alphabeta heterodimer suggested that the unfolding pathway of the alpha subunit is the same, whether it is in the form of the free subunit or in the heterodimer.  相似文献   

11.
UDP-galactose 4-epimerase from Escherichia coli is a homodimer of 39 kDa subunit with non-covalently bound NAD acting as cofactor. The enzyme can be reversibly reactivated after denaturation and dissociation using 8 M urea at pH 7.0. There is a strong affinity between the cofactor and the refolded molecule as no extraneous NAD is required for its reactivation. Results from equilibrium denaturation using parameters like catalytic activity, circular-dichroism, fluorescence emission (both intrinsic and with extraneous fluorophore 1-aniline 8-naphthalene sulphonic acid), 'reductive inhibition' (associated with orientation of NAD on the native enzyme surface), elution profile from size-exclusion HPLC and light scattering have been compiled here. These show that inactivation, integrity of secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures have different transition mid-points suggestive of non-cooperative transition. The unfolding process may be broadly resolved into three parts: an active dimeric holoenzyme with 50% of its original secondary structure at 2.5 M urea; an active monomeric holoenzyme at 3 M urea with only 40% of secondary structure and finally further denaturation by 6 M urea leads to an inactive equilibrium unfolded state with only 20% of residual secondary structure. Thermodynamical parameters associated with some transitions have been quantitated. The results have been discussed with the X-ray crystallographic structure of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
pH-induced conformational states of bovine growth hormone   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The folding behavior of bovine growth hormone (bGH) is examined by chemical and pH denaturation using several spectroscopic probes of protein secondary and tertiary structure. Partially denaturing concentrations of urea eliminate the native-state quenching of intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence, from the single protein tryptophan, but the fluorescence emission spectrum is not red-shifted like the unfolded state, and the protein retains substantial secondary structure. A neutral-to-acid pH shift also eliminates tryptophan quenching; however, the loss of quenching is not accompanied by an emission red-shift. In addition, the protein undergoes a pH-dependent UV absorbance transition; the changes in absorptivity have the same midpoint as the transition associated with the change in intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. The magnitude of the absorption transition is similar to that observed previously for urea denaturation of the protein. In a similar fashion, a pH-dependent CD transition is also observed; however, the transition occurs at a higher pH. The behavior of the various optical probes indicates that the pH-induced conformational transition produces a highly populated species in which the microenvironment surrounding the single protein tryptophan residue resembles that observed during the urea-induced unfolding/refolding transition. The pH-induced changes in tertiary structure occur at a lower pH than the changes associated with a portion of the secondary structure. Proton NMR of the low-pH intermediate indicates that the three His and six Tyr resonances are indistinguishable from the unfolded state. The intermediate(s) observed by either chemical or pH-induced denaturation resemble(s) a molten globule state which contains significant secondary structure. The residual secondary structure present in the intermediate could be nonnative.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The cytosolic NADP+-dependent malic enzyme (c-NADP-ME) has a dimer-dimer quaternary structure in which the dimer interface associates more tightly than the tetramer interface. In this study, the urea-induced unfolding process of the c-NADP-ME interface mutants was monitored using fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy, analytical ultracentrifugation and enzyme activities. Here, we demonstrate the differential protein stability between dimer and tetramer interface interactions of human c-NADP-ME. Our data clearly demonstrate that the protein stability of c-NADP-ME is affected predominantly by disruptions at the dimer interface rather than at the tetramer interface. First, during thermal stability experiments, the melting temperatures of the wild-type and tetramer interface mutants are 8–10°C higher than those of the dimer interface mutants. Second, during urea denaturation experiments, the thermodynamic parameters of the wild-type and tetramer interface mutants are almost identical. However, for the dimer interface mutants, the first transition of the urea unfolding curves shift towards a lower urea concentration, and the unfolding intermediate exist at a lower urea concentration. Third, for tetrameric WT c-NADP-ME, the enzyme is first dissociated from a tetramer to dimers before the 2 M urea treatment, and the dimers then dissociated into monomers before the 2.5 M urea treatment. With a dimeric tetramer interface mutant (H142A/D568A), the dimer completely dissociated into monomers after a 2.5 M urea treatment, while for a dimeric dimer interface mutant (H51A/D90A), the dimer completely dissociated into monomers after a 1.5 M urea treatment, indicating that the interactions of c-NADP-ME at the dimer interface are truly stronger than at the tetramer interface. Thus, this study provides a reasonable explanation for why malic enzymes need to assemble as a dimer of dimers.  相似文献   

14.
The equilibrium unfolding transitions for the human M form of alpha 1-antitrypsin have been determined using a number of techniques reflecting changes in tryptophan fluorescence lifetime and quenching, exposure of tryptophan to solvent, secondary structure and the Stokes' radius of the protein. The denaturation curves are more complex than is usual for globular proteins and indicate the presence of multiple equilibrium intermediates in the presence of denaturant. This is in marked contrast to the more co-operative transition of the cleaved inhibitor. In addition, a recombinant non-glycosylated alpha 1-antitrypsin has been shown to have a closely similar conformation to the human M protein and to exhibit very similar reversible unfolding transitions, and hence similar stability and co-operativity. Differences in tryptophan environment are reflected in the dequenching of tryptophan fluorescence and reduced asymmetry in the near ultraviolet circular dichroism of the non-glycosylated protein, suggesting direct interaction of glycosyl residues with a tryptophan. Both the M type and the recombinant protein exhibit similar patterns of folding, with rapid collapse to a compact intermediate reminiscent of the widely observed molten globule state that folds more slowly to the native protein. The papain-cleaved M form also folds through a similar compact state in the absence of the C-terminal peptide that results from cleavage. It is concluded that part of the C-terminal 36 residue peptide interacts strongly with the main body of the protein in the folded inhibitor. This interaction will also be important during early stages of folding of the intact protein to direct the folding pathway. The lack of glycosylation leads to an increase in aggregation of the recombinant protein upon refolding, especially after extended denaturation times. The more rapid turnover of the recombinant protein in vivo is shown not to be due to a lower thermodynamic stability, but may be associated with a lower kinetic stability arising from the increased tendency to aggregation.  相似文献   

15.
Cofactor and tryptophan accessibility of the 65-kDa form of rat brain glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) was investigated by fluorescence quenching measurements using acrylamide, I-, and Cs+ as the quenchers. Trp residues were partially exposed to solvent. I- was less able and Cs+ was more able to quench the fluorescence of Trp residues in the holoenzyme of GAD (holoGAD) than the apoenzyme (apoGAD). The fraction of exposed Trp residues were in the range of 30-49%. In contrast, pyridoxal-P bound to the active site of GAD was exposed to solvent. I- was more able and Cs+ was less able to quench the fluorescence of pyridoxal-P in holoGAD. The cofactor was present in a positively charged microenvironment, making it accessible for interactions with anions. A difference in the exposure of Trp residues and pyridoxal-P to these charged quenchers suggested that the exposed Trp residues were essentially located outside of the active site. Changes in the accessibility of Trp residues upon pyridoxal-P binding strongly supported a significant conformational change in GAD. Fluorescence intensity measurements were also carried out to investigate the unfolding of GAD using guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) as the denaturant. At 0.8-1.5 M GdnHCl, an intermediate step was observed during the unfolding of GAD from the native to the denatured state, and was not found during the refolding of GAD from the denatured to native state, indicating that this intermediate step was not a reversible process. However, at >1.5 M GdnHCl for holoGAD and >2.0 M GdnHCl for apoGAD, the transition leading to the denatured state was reversible. It was suggested that the intermediate step involved the dissociation of native dimer of GAD into monomers and the change in the secondary structure of the protein. Circular dichroism revealed a decrease in the alpha-helix content of GAD from 36 to 28%. The unfolding pattern suggested that GAD may consist of at least two unfolding domains. Unfolding of the lower GdnHCl-resisting domain occurred at a similar concentration of denaturant for apoGAD and holoGAD, while unfolding of the higher GdnHCl-resisting domain occurred at a higher concentration of GdnHCl for apoGAD than holoGAD.  相似文献   

16.
Two-dimensional infrared correlation spectroscopy (2D-IR) was applied to the study of urea- and heat-induced unfolding denaturation of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SR ATPase). Urea at 2-3 M causes reversible loss of SR ATPase activity, while higher concentrations induce irreversible denaturation. Heat-induced denaturation is a non-two-state process, with an "intermediate state" (at t approximately 45 degrees C) characterized by the presence of protein monomers, instead of the native oligomers. 2D-IR reveals that urea denaturation causes loss of the structural transition to the "intermediate state". Whenever the urea effect can be reversed, the transition to the "intermediate state" is re-established.  相似文献   

17.
Mitra D  Mukherjee S  Das AK 《FEBS letters》2006,580(30):6846-6860
Circular dichroism and resolution-enhanced Fourier transform infrared reveal induction of secondary structural elements on peptidyl-prolyl cistrans isomerase A (PpiA) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis upon binding cyclosporin A (CsA). Thermal denaturation shows aggregation of PpiA at higher temperatures (>70 °C) and CsA fails to impart stabilization in protein structure. However, CsA stabilizes PpiA structure in urea denaturation. In presence/absence of CsA, urea-induced reversible unfolding of secondary and tertiary structures follows two-state and three-state transition, respectively. The chemical unfolding results also demonstrate that loss in the tertiary structure precedes the loss in secondary structure both in presence and absence of CsA at the initial stages. Fluorescence quenching suggests presence of a positive barrier around tryptophan microenvironment of PpiA.  相似文献   

18.
The unfolding of the recombinant regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase I was followed by monitoring the intrinsic protein fluorescence. Unfolding proceeds in at least two stages. First, the quenching of fluorescence due to cAMP binding is abolished at relatively low levels of urea (less than 2 M) and is observed as an increase in intensity at 340 nm. The high-affinity binding of cAMP is retained in 3 M urea even though the quenching is lost. The second stage of unfolding, presumably representing unfolding of the polypeptide chain, is seen as a shift in lambda max from 340 to 353 nm. The midpoint concentration, Cm, for this process is 5.0 M. Cyclic AMP binding activity is lost at a half-maximal urea concentration of 3.5 M and precedes the shift in lambda max. Unfolding of the protein in the presence of urea was fully reversible; furthermore, the presence of excess levels of cAMP stabilized the regulatory subunit. A free energy value (delta GDH2O) of 7.1 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol was calculated for the native form of the protein when denaturation was induced with either urea or guanidine hydrochloride. Iodide quenching of tryptophan fluorescence was used to elucidate the number of tryptophan residues accessible during various stages of the unfolding process. In the native cAMP-bound form of the regulatory subunit, only one of the three tryptophans in the regulatory subunit is quenched by iodide while more than two tryptophans can be quenched with iodide in the presence of 3 M urea.  相似文献   

19.
Apo-pseudoazurin is a single domain cupredoxin. We have engineered a mutant in which a unique tryptophan replaces the tyrosine residue found in the tyrosine corner of this Greek key protein, a region that has been proposed to have an important role in folding. Equilibrium denaturation of Y74W apo-pseudoazurin demonstrated multistate unfolding in urea (pH 7.0, 0.5 M Na(2)SO(4) at 15 degrees C), in which one or more partially folded species are populated in 4. 3 M urea. Using a variety of biophysical techniques, we show that these species, on average, have lost a substantial portion of the native secondary structure, lack fixed tertiary packing involving tryptophan and tyrosine residues, are less compact than the native state as determined by fluorescence lifetimes and time-resolved anisotropy, but retain significant residual structure involving the trytophan residue. Peptides ranging in length from 11 to 30 residues encompassing this region, however, did not contain detectable nonrandom structure, suggesting that long-range interactions are important for stabilizing the equilibrium partially unfolded species in the intact protein. On the basis of these results, we suggest that the equilibrium denaturation of Y74W apo-pseudoazurin generates one or more partially unfolded species that are globally collapsed and retain elements of the native structure involving the newly introduced tryptophan residue. We speculate on the role of such intermediates in the generation of the complex Greek key fold.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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