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1.
The preceding article shows that there are eight highly protected amide protons in the S-peptide moiety of RNAase S at pH 5, 0 degrees C. The residues with protected NH protons are 7 to 13, whose amide protons are H-bonded in the 3 to 13 alpha-helix, and Asp 14, whose NH proton is H-bonded to the CO group of Val47. We describe here the exchange behavior of these eight protected protons as a function of pH. Exchange rates of the individual NH protons are measured by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance in D2O. A procedure is used for specifically labeling with 1H only these eight NH protons. The resonance assignments of the eight protons are made chiefly by partial exchange, through correlating the resonance intensities in spectra taken when the peptide is bound and when it is dissociated from S-protein in 3.5 M-urea-d4, in D2O, pH 2.3, -4 degrees C. The two remaining assignments are made and some other assignments are checked by measurements of the nuclear Overhauser effect between adjacent NH protons of the alpha-helix. There is a transition in exchange behavior between pH 3, where the helix is weakly protected against exchange, and pH 5 where the helix is much more stable. At pH 3.1, 20 degrees C, exchange rates are uniform within the helix within a factor of two, after correction for different intrinsic exchange rates. The degree of protection within the helix is only 10 to 20-fold at this pH. At pH 5.1, 20 degrees C, the helix is more stable by two orders of magnitude and exchange occurs preferentially from the N-terminal end. At both pH values the NH proton of Asp 14, which is just outside the helix, is less protected by an order of magnitude than the adjacent NH protons inside the helix. Opening of the helix can be observed below pH 3.7 by changes in chemical shifts of the NH protons in the helix. At pH 2.4 the changes are 25% of those expected for complete opening. Helix opening is a fast reaction on the n.m.r. time scale (tau much less than 1 ms) unlike the generalized unfolding of RNAase S which is a slow reaction. Dissociation of S-peptide from S-protein in native RNAase S at pH 3.0 also is a slow reaction. Opening of the helix below pH 3.7 is a two-state reaction, as judged by comparing chemical shifts with exchange rates. The exchange rates at pH 3.1 are predicted correctly from the changes in chemical shift by assuming that helix opening is a two-state reaction. At pH values above 3.7, the nature of the helix opening reaction changes. These results indicate that at least one partially unfolded state of RNAase S is populated in the low pH unfolding transition.  相似文献   

2.
A database of hydrogen-deuterium exchange results has been compiled for proteins for which there are published rates of out-exchange in the native state, protection against exchange during folding, and out-exchange in partially folded forms. The question of whether the slow exchange core is the folding core (Woodward C, 1993, Trends Biochem Sci 18:359-360) is reexamined in a detailed comparison of the specific amide protons (NHs) and the elements of secondary structure on which they are located. For each pulsed exchange or competition experiment, probe NHs are shown explicitly; the large number and broad distribution of probe NHs support the validity of comparing out-exchange with pulsed-exchange/competition experiments. There is a strong tendency for the same elements of secondary structure to carry NHs most protected in the native state, NHs first protected during folding, and NHs most protected in partially folded species. There is not a one-to-one correspondence of individual NHs. Proteins for which there are published data for native state out-exchange and theta values are also reviewed. The elements of secondary structure containing the slowest exchanging NHs in native proteins tend to contain side chains with high theta values or be connected to a turn/loop with high theta values. A definition for a protein core is proposed, and the implications for protein folding are discussed. Apparently, during folding and in the native state, nonlocal interactions between core sequences are favored more than other possible nonlocal interactions. Other studies of partially folded bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (Barbar E, Barany G, Woodward C, 1995, Biochemistry 34:11423-11434; Barber E, Hare M, Daragan V, Barany G, Woodward C, 1998, Biochemistry 37:7822-7833), suggest that developing cores have site-specific energy barriers between microstates, one disordered, and the other(s) more ordered.  相似文献   

3.
Digestion of rabbit liver fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase with subtilisin results in a several-fold increase in catalytic activity measured at pH 9.2. This change is due to cleavage of a peptide bond located 60 amino acid residues from the NH2-terminus. The S-peptide and the residual subunit appear as separate peptides in sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and the S-peptide can be isolated by gel filtration in 9% HCOOH. Under nondissociating conditions, however, the S-peptide remains associated with the protein, and the tetrameric structure and original molecular weight are preserved. Thus the nicking of the peptide chain by subtilisin causes a conformation change that alters the catalytic properties of the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
We make use of the known exchange rates of individual amide proton in the S-peptide moiety of ribonuclease S (RNAase S) to determine when during folding the alpha-helix formed by residues 3 to 13 becomes stable. The method is based on pulse-labeling with [3H]H2O during the folding followed by an exchange-out step after folding that removes 3H from all amide protons of the S-peptide except from residues 7 to 14, after which S-peptide is separated rapidly from S-protein by high performance liquid chromatography. The slow-folding species of unfolded RNAase S are studied. Folding takes place in strongly native conditions (pH 6.0, 10 degrees C). The seven H-bonded amide protons of the 3-13 helix become stable to exchange at a late stage in folding at the same time as the tertiary structure of RNAase S is formed, as monitored by tyrosine absorbance. At this stage in folding, the isomerization reaction that creates the major slow-folding species has not yet been reversed. Our result for the 3-13 helix is consistent with the finding of Labhardt (1984), who has studied the kinetics of folding of RNAase S at 32 degrees C by fast circular dichroism. He finds the dichroic change expected for formation of the 3-13 helix occurring when the tertiary structure is formed. Protected amide protons are found in the S-protein moiety earlier in folding. Formation or stabilization of this folding intermediate depends upon S-peptide: the intermediate is not observed when S-protein folds alone, and folding of S-protein is twice as slow in the absence of S-peptide. Although S-peptide combines with S-protein early in folding and is needed to stabilize an S-protein folding intermediate, the S-peptide helix does not itself become stable until the tertiary structure of RNAase S is formed.  相似文献   

5.
The hydrogen exchange kinetics of the S-peptide in ribonuclease S can be measured by first tritiating the S-peptide in the absence of S-protein and then allowing it to recombine rapidly with S-protein. Afterwards the exchange reactions of this specific segment of ribonuclease S can be studied. The exchange kinetics of bound S-peptide are complex, indicating that different protons exchange at markedly different rates. The terminal exchange reaction, involving at least five highly protected protons, has been studied as a function of pH.At low concentrations of ribonuclease S the exchange kinetics become concentration-dependent, owing to the dissociation of the S-peptide. Although the fraction of free S-peptide is always very small, its rate of exchange is several orders of magnitude faster than that of bound S-peptide, and the concentration dependence of the exchange kinetics is readily measurable. It provides a highly sensitive method for determining small dissociation constants (KD). Values of KD ranging from 10?6m at pH 2.7, 0 °C, to 2 × 10?10m at pH 7.0, 0 °C, are reported here. Our value for KD at pH 7.0, 0 °C, confirms the data and extrapolation to 0 °C of Hearn et al. (1971).At high concentrations of ribonuclease S the terminal exchange reaction is independent of concentration. It probably results from a local unfolding reaction of the bound S-peptide. Above pH 4 the strong pH dependence of KD closely resembles that of the apparent equilibrium constant for this local unfolding reaction. The latter may be one step in the dissociation process and we present such a model for ribonuclease S dissociation.Measurement of concentration-dependent exchange kinetics should provide a useful method of determining small dissociation constants in other systems: for example, in studies of protein-nucleic acid interactions.  相似文献   

6.
采用分子动力学方法和全原子模型研究尿素和水分子对模型蛋白S-肽链结构转化的影响。模拟结果显示S-肽链的变性速率常数k值随着尿素浓度的增加而先降低后升高,在尿素浓度为2.9 mol/L时达到最低值。模拟了不同尿素浓度下尿素-肽链、水-肽链以及肽链分子氢键的形成状况。结果表明:尿素浓度较低时,尿素分子与S-肽链的极性氨基酸侧链形成氢键,但不破坏其分子内的骨架氢键,尿素在S-肽链水化层外形成限制性空间,增强了S-肽链的稳定性。随着尿素的升高,尿素分子进入S-肽链内部并与其内部氨基酸残基形成氢键,导致S-肽链的骨架氢键丧失,S-肽链发生去折叠。上述模拟结果与文献报道的实验结果一致,从分子水平上揭示了尿素对蛋白质分子结构变化的影响机制,对于研究和发展蛋白质折叠及稳定化技术具有指导意义。  相似文献   

7.
D J Welsch  G L Nelsestuen 《Biochemistry》1988,27(13):4946-4952
Prothrombin fragment 1 (prothrombin residues 1-156) contains two acetylation sites that are protected from derivatization by calcium. The first site was protected by only calcium [Welsch, D. J., & Nelsestuen, G. L. (1988) Biochemistry (second of three papers in this issue)] while the second site was protected by magnesium as well. To identify this second acetylation site, fragment 1 was first acetylated with unlabeled reagent in the presence of magnesium. Metal ions were removed, and the protein was acetylated with radiolabeled reagent. The incorporated radiolabel was stable over long periods of time and at acidic or basic pH as long as elevated temperatures were avoided. The radiolabel was removed by treatment of the protein at pH 10 and 50 degrees C or with 0.2 M hydroxylamine at 50 degrees C for at least 30 min. Proteolytic degradation of the protein showed that the radioactivity appeared in a tryptic peptide corresponding to residues 94-111 of prothrombin. The Lys-97 in this peptide was acetylated but did not contain radiolabel. Amino acid sequence analysis revealed that the radiolabel was associated with an unextracted sequence product. Aglycofragment 1, produced by treatment of fragment 1 with HF, was radiolabeled by this procedure; peptide 94-111 was isolated and was further digested with protease. The major radiolabeled product contained Asn101-Ser102 along with the expected chitobiose attached to Asn-101. NMR analysis revealed the presence of three acetate groups which would correspond to two from the chitobiose plus the incorporated acetate residue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Two fragments of pancreatic ribonuclease A, a truncated version of S-peptide (residues 1-15) and S-protein (residues 21-124), combine to give a catalytically active complex designated ribonuclease S. Residue 13 in the peptide is methionine. According to the X-ray structure of the complex of S-protein and S-peptide (1-20), this residue is almost fully buried. We have substituted Met-13 with seven other hydrophobic residues ranging in size from glycine to phenylalanine and have determined the thermodynamic parameters associated with the binding of these analogues to S-protein by titration calorimetry at 25 degrees C. These data should provide useful quantitative information for evaluating the contribution of hydrophobic interactions in the stabilization of protein structures.  相似文献   

9.
10.
A medium resolution hydrogen exchange method (Rosa & Richards, 1979) has been used to measure the average rates of amide hydrogen exchange for known segments of the S-protein portion of ribonuclease-S. The analytical procedure permitted exchange rates to be monitored for seven S-protein fragments distributed throughout the structure, including regions of α-helix and β-sheet. Kinetics were measured as a function of pH, temperature and S-peptide binding.The pH dependence of exchange from isolated S-protein between pH 2·8 and pH 7·0 was found to deviate significantly from a first-order dependence on hydroxide ion concentration. The protection against exchange with increasing pH appeared to be closely related to the electrostatic stabilization of S-protein. It is suggested that such favorable electrostatic interactions result in increased energy barriers to the conformational fluctuations that provide solvent access to the time-average crystallographic structure. This explanation of the observed correlation between stability and exchange kinetics is also consistent with the calculated apparent activation energies for exchange from S-protein between 5·5 and 20 °C.S-peptide binding dramatically slows exchange from many S-protein sites, even those distant from the area of S-peptide contact. Interestingly, the effects of complex formation are not evenly propagated throughout S-protein. The most significantly perturbed sites (≥103-fold reduction in exchange rate constants) lie within fragments derived from regions of secondary structure. Exchange from several other fragments is not significantly affected. The S-peptide—S-protein dissociation constant at neutral pH is so small that the measured exchange must have occurred from the complex and not from the dissociated parts.  相似文献   

11.
We have studied the conformation as well as V8 protease-mediated synthesis of peptide fragments, namely amino acid residues 295-316 (TC-peptide) of thermolysin and residues 1-20 (S-peptide) of ribonuclease A, to examine whether "conformational trapping" of the product can facilitate reverse proteolysis. The circular dichroism study showed cosolvent-mediated cooperative helix formation in TC-peptide with attainment of about 30-35% helicity in the presence of 40% 1-propanol and 2-propanol solutions at pH 6 and 4 degrees C. The thermal melting profiles of TC-peptide in the above cosolvents were very similar. V8 protease catalyzed the synthesis of TC-peptide from a 1:1 mixture of the non-interacting complementary fragments (TC295-302 and TC303-316) in the presence of the above cosolvents at pH 6 and 4 degrees C. In contrast, V8 protease did not catalyze the ligation of S1-9 and S10-20, although S-peptide could assume helical conformation in the presence of the cosolvent used for the semisynthetic reaction. V8 protease was able to synthesize an analog of S-peptide (SA-peptide) in which residues 10-14 were substituted (RQHMD-->VAAAK). While S-peptide exhibited helical conformation in the presence of aqueous propanol solutions, SA-peptide displayed predominantly beta-sheet conformation. SA-peptide showed enhanced resistance to proteolysis as compared with S-peptide. Thus, failure of semisynthesis of S-peptide may be a consequence of high flexibility around the 9-10 peptide bond due to its proximity to the helix stop signal. The results suggest that protease-mediated ligations may be achieved by design and manipulation of the conformational aspects of the product.  相似文献   

12.
R W Storrs  D Truckses  D E Wemmer 《Biopolymers》1992,32(12):1695-1702
Helix propagation of the S-peptide sequence (residues 1-19 of ribonuclease A) in 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) solutions has been investigated with CD and nmr Overhauser effect spectroscopies. In this study, the S-peptide helix is covalently initiated at the N-terminus through disulfide bonds to a helix scaffold derived from the N-terminal sequence of the bee venom peptide apamin. The entire S-peptide sequence of this hybrid sequence peptide becomes helical at high proportions of TFE. Residues 14-19 of the S-peptide are not helical in the free peptide in TFE, nor are they helical in ribonuclease A. The "helix stop" signal encoded by the S-peptide sequence near residue 13 does not persist at high TFE with this hybrid sequence peptide. The helix-stabilizing effects of TFE are due at least in part to facilitated propagation of an extant helix. This stabilizing effect appears to be a general solvation effect and not due to specific interaction of the helical peptide with TFE. Specifically these data support the idea that TFE destabilizes the coil state by less effective hydrogen bonding of the peptide amide to the solvent.  相似文献   

13.
There are multiple pathways of intracellular protein degradation, and molecular determinants within proteins appear to target them for particular pathways of breakdown. We use red cell-mediated microinjection to introduce radiolabeled proteins into cultured human fibroblasts in order to follow their catabolism. A well-characterized protein, bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase A), is localized initially in the cytosol of cells after microinjection, but it is subsequently taken up and degraded by lysosomes. This lysosomal pathway of proteolysis is subject to regulation in that RNase A is taken up and degraded by lysosomes at twice the rate when serum is omitted from the culture medium. Subtilisin cleaves RNase A between residues 20 and 21, and the separated fragments are termed RNase S-peptide (residues 1–20) and RNase S-protein (residues 21–124). Microinjected RNase S-protein is degraded in a serum-independent manner, while RNase S-peptide microinjected alone shows a twofold increase in degradation in response to serum withdrawal. Furthermore, covalent linkage of S-peptide to other proteins prior to microinjection causes degradation of the conjugate to become serum responsive. These results show that recognition of RNase A and certain other proteins for enhanced lysosomal degradation during serum withdrawal is based on some feature of the amino-terminal 20 amino acids. The entire S-peptide is not required for enhanced lysosomal degradation during serum withdrawal because degradation of certain fragments is also responsive to serum. We have identified the essential region to be within residues 7–11 of RNase S-peptide (Lys-Phe-Glu-Arg-Gln; KFERQ). To determine whether related peptides exist in cellular proteins, we raised antibodies to the pentapeptide. Affinity-purified antibodies to KFERQ specifically precipitate 25–35% of cellular proteins, and these proteins are preferentially degraded in response to serum withdrawal. Computer analyses of known protein sequences indicate that proteins degraded by lysosomes at an enhanced rate in response to serum withdrawal contain peptide regions related, but not identical, to KFERQ. We suggest two possible peptide motifs related to KFERQ and speculate about possible mechanisms of selective delivery of proteins to lysosomes based on such peptide regions.  相似文献   

14.
Y Shai  T K Brunck  I M Chaiken 《Biochemistry》1989,28(22):8804-8811
Structural principles were studied which underlie the recognition of sense peptides (sense DNA encoded) by synthetic peptides encoded in the corresponding antisense strand of DNA. The direct-readout antisense peptides corresponding to ribonuclease S-peptide bind to an affinity matrix containing immobilized S-peptide with significant selectivity and with dissociation constants in the range of 10(-6) M as judged by analytical affinity chromatography. Synthetic, sequence-modified forms of antisense peptides also exhibit substantial binding affinity, including a "scrambled" peptide in which the order of residue positions is changed while the overall residue composition is retained. The antisense mutants, as the original antisense peptides, bind at saturation with greater than 1:1 stoichiometry to immobilized S-peptide. The data suggest significant sequence degeneracy in the interaction of antisense with sense peptide. In contrast, selectivity was confirmed by the inability of several control peptides to bind to immobilized S-peptide. The idea was tested that the hydropathic pattern of the amino acid sequence serves to induce antisense peptide recognition. A hydropathically sequence-simplified mutant of antisense peptide was made in which all strongly hydrophilic (charged) residues were replaced by Lys, all strongly hydrophobic residues by Leu, and all weakly hydrophilic and hydrophobic residues by Ala, except Gly which was unchanged. This "KLAG" mutant also binds to immobilized S-peptide, with an affinity only an order of magnitude less than that with the original antisense peptide and with multiple stoichiometry. Mutants of the KLAG model, in which the hydropathic pattern was changed substantially, exhibited a lower binding affinity for S-peptide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
We have found that ribonuclease S-peptide can work as a novel peptidyl substrate in protein cross-linking reactions catalyzed by microbial transglutaminase (MTG) from Streptomyces mobaraensis. Enhanced green fluorescent protein tethered to S-peptide at its N-terminus (S-tag-EGFP) appeared to be efficiently cross-linked by MTG. As wild-type EGFP was not susceptible to cross-linking, the S-peptide moiety is likely to be responsible for the cross-linking. A site-directed mutation study assigned Gln15 in the S-peptide sequence as the sole acyl donor. Mass spectrometric analysis showed that two Lys residues (Lys5 and Lys11) in the S-peptide sequence functioned as acyl acceptors. We also succeeded in direct monitoring of the cross-linking process by virtue of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between S-tag-EGFP and its blue fluorescent color variant (S-tag-EBFP). The protein cross-linking was tunable by either engineering S-peptide sequence or capping the S-peptide moiety with S-protein, the partner protein of S-peptide for the formation of ribonuclease A. The latter indicates that S-protein can be used as a specific inhibitor of S-peptide-directed protein cross-linking by MTG. The controllable protein cross-linking of S-peptide as a potent substrate of MTG will shed new light on biomolecule conjugation.  相似文献   

16.
Recent work has shown that, with synthetic analogues of C-peptide (residues 1-13 of ribonuclease A), the stability of the peptide helix in H2O depends strongly on the charge on the N-terminal residue. We have asked whether, in semisynthetic ribonuclease S reconstituted from S-protein plus an analogue of S-peptide (1-15), the stability of the peptide helix is correlated with the Tm of the reconstituted ribonuclease S. Six peptides have been made, which contain Glu9----Leu, a blocked alpha-COO- group (-CONH2), and either Gln11 or Glu11. The N-terminal residue has been varied; its charge varies from +2 (Lys) to -1 (succinyl-Ala). We have measured the stability of the peptide helix, the affinity of the peptide for S-protein (by C.D. titration), and the thermal stability of the reconstituted ribonuclease S. All six peptide analogues show strongly enhanced helix formation compared to either S-peptide (1-15) or (1-19), and the helix content increases as the charge on the N-terminal residue changes from +2 to -1. All six peptides show increased affinity for S-protein compared to S-peptide (1-19), and all six reconstituted ribonucleases S show an increase in Tm compared to the protein with S-peptide (1-19). The Tm increases as the charge on residue 1 changes from +2 to -1. The largest increment in Tm is 6 degrees. The results suggest that the stability of a protein can be increased by enhancing the stability of its secondary structure.  相似文献   

17.
We have analyzed the effects of trifluoroethanol (TFE) and three other alcohols(1-propanol, 2-propanol and hexafluoro-2-propanol) on S-peptide (residues 1-20) of ribonuclease A, an analog of S-peptide (QHM-->AAA, Sa-peptide) and TC-peptide (residues 295-316) of thermolysin to assess the helix-enhancing propensity of fluoro and alkyl alcohols under different environmental conditions of cosolvent concentration, pH and temperature by circular dichroism (CD). The dependence of cosolvent concentration on helix-induction showed a plateauing effect in all cases. 1-Propanol and 2-propanol were as effective as TFE in all the three peptides. Hexafluoro-2-propanol (HFIP) was a better helix enhancer in all cases however, the relative effectiveness varied with the peptide sequence. The alcohol transitions were analyzed assuming a two-state transition. The free energy decreased linearly in the cosolvent concentration range of 0-5 m for all the three peptides. The m-value (constant of proportionality) varied between peptides but was similar for any given peptide for TFE, 1-propanol or 2-propanol. The m-values of HFIP for all three peptides was much higher compared to other cosolvents. The isothermal cosolvent helix-induction curves for the three peptides exhibited similar features of shape and character for 1-propanol, 2-propanol and TFE. The additivity of cosolvent-induced helix formation was observed for different blends of alkyl and/or fluoro cosolvents. The pH-dependence of helix formation was observed in both TFE and 1-propanol solutions for S-peptide and TC-peptide, respectively, while in Sa-peptide, which was designed to perturb the pH-effect, helix formation was unaffected. The overall results provide some insight into the mechanism of cosolvent-mediated helix-enhancement in protein segments and are likely to facilitate optimization of conditions for cosolvent usage in chemistry and biology.  相似文献   

18.
A detailed study of the NH resonances of Ribonuclease-S-peptide (1-19 N-terminal fragment of Ribonuclease A) has been carried out in H2O, pH 3.0, in the temperature range 1-31 degrees, and ionic strength 0-1 M. Individual assignments of all NH amide signals have been achieved by means of extensive double resonance experiments. The folding of S-peptide at low temperature has been monitored by examination of the several NH resonance parameters: first, the nonlinearity of chemical shift vs. temperature plots; second, the selective broadening observed for signals assigned to residues 3-13; and third, the decrease of 3JHNCH coupling constants belonging to this region of the polypeptide chain. All these results are in agreement with the formation of a folded structure at low temperature, which is similar to the one found for the S-peptide in the RNase S crystal.  相似文献   

19.
The major unfolded form of ribonuclease A is known to show well-populated structural intermediates transiently during folding at 0°–10°C. We describe here how the exchange reaction between D2O and peptide NH protons can be used to trap folding intermediates. The protons protected from exchange during folding can be characterized by 1H-nmr after folding is complete. The feasibility of using 1H-nmr to resolve a set of protected peptide protons is demonstrated by using a specially prepared sample of ribonuclease S in D2O in which only the peptide protons of residues 7–14 are in the 1H-form. All eight of these protected peptide protons are H-bonded. Resonance assignments made on isolated peptides containing these residues have been used to identify the protected protons. Other sets of protected protons trapped in the 1H-form can also be isolated by differential exchange, using either ribonuclease A or S. Earlier model compound studies have indicated that H-bonded folding intermediates should be unstable in water unless stabilized by additional interactions. Nevertheless, peptides derived from ribonuclease A that contain residues 3–13 do show partial helix formation in water at low temperatures. We discuss the possibility that specific interactions between side chains can stabilize short α-helixes by nucleating the helix, and that specific interactions may also define the helix boundaries at early stages in folding.  相似文献   

20.
D N Brems  R L Baldwin 《Biochemistry》1985,24(7):1689-1693
pH-pulse exchange curves have been measured for samples taken during the folding of ribonuclease A. The curve gives the number of protected amide protons remaining after a 10-s pulse of exchange at pHs from 6.0 to 9.5, at 10 degrees C. Amide proton exchange is base catalyzed, and the rate of exchange increases 3000-fold between pH 6.0 and pH 9.5. The pH at which exchange occurs depends on the degree of protection against exchange provided by structure. Pulse exchange curves have been measured for samples taken at three times during folding, and these are compared to the pulse exchange curves of N, the native protein, of U, the unfolded protein in 4 M guanidinium chloride, and of IN, the native-like intermediate obtained by the prefolding method of Schmid. The results are used to determine whether folding intermediates are present that can be distinguished from N and U and to measure the average degree of protection of the protected protons in folding intermediates. The amide (peptide NH) protons of unfolded ribonuclease A were prelabeled with 3H by a previous procedure that labels only the slow-folding species. Folding was initiated at pH 4.0, 10 degrees C, where amide proton exchange is slower than the folding of the slow-folding species. Samples were taken at 0-, 10-, and 20-s folding, and their pH-pulse exchange curves were measured.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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