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1.
Hummer G  García AE  Garde S 《Proteins》2001,42(1):77-84
We study the reversible folding/unfolding of short Ala and Gly-based peptides by molecular dynamics simulations of all-atom models in explicit water solvent. A kinetic analysis shows that the formation of a first alpha-helical turn occurs within 0.1-1 ns, in agreement with the analyses of laser temperature jump experiments. The unfolding times exhibit Arrhenius temperature dependence. For a rapidly nucleating all-Ala peptide, the helix nucleation time depends only weakly on temperature. For a peptide with enthalpically competing turn-like structures, helix nucleation exhibits an Arrhenius temperature dependence, corresponding to the unfolding of enthalpic traps in the coil ensemble. An analysis of structures in a "transition-state ensemble" shows that helix-to-coil transitions occur predominantly through breaking of hydrogen bonds at the helix ends, particularly at the C-terminus. The temperature dependence of the transition-state ensemble and the corresponding folding/unfolding pathways illustrate that folding mechanisms can change with temperature, possibly complicating the interpretation of high-temperature unfolding simulations. The timescale of helix formation is an essential factor in molecular models of protein folding. The rapid helix nucleation observed here suggests that transient helices form early in the folding event.  相似文献   

2.
We test molecular level hypotheses for the high thermal stability of alpha-helical conformations of alanine-based peptides by performing detailed atomistic simulations of a 20-amino-acid peptide with explicit treatment of water. To assess the contribution of large side chains to alpha-helix stability through backbone desolvation and salt-bridge formation, we simulate the alanine-rich peptide, Ac-YAEAAKAAEAAKAAEAAKAF-Nme, referred to as the EK peptide, that has three pairs of "i, i + 3" glutamic acid(-) and lysine(+) substitutions. Efficient configurational sampling of the EK peptide over a wide temperature range enabled by the replica exchange molecular dynamics technique allows characterization of the stability of alpha-helix with respect to heat-induced unfolding. We find that near ambient temperatures, the EK peptide predominately samples alpha-helical configurations with 80% fractional helicity at 300 K. The helix melts over a broad range of temperatures with melting temperature, T(m), equal to 350 K, that is significantly higher than the T(m) of a 21-residue polyalanine peptide, A(21). Salt-bridges between oppositely charged Glu(-) and Lys(+) side chains can, in principle, provide thermal stability to alpha-helical conformers. For the specific EK peptide sequence, we observe infrequent formation of Glu-Lys salt-bridges (with approximately 10-20% probability) and therefore we conclude that salt-bridge formation does not contribute significantly to the EK peptide's helical stability. However, lysine side chains are found to shield specific "i, i + 4" backbone hydrogen bonds from water, indicating that large side-chain substituents can play an important role in stabilizing alpha-helical configurations of short peptides in aqueous solution through mediation of water access to backbone hydrogen bonds. These observations have implications on molecular engineering of peptides and biomolecules in the design of their thermostable variants where the shielding mechanism can act in concert with other factors such as salt-bridge formation, thereby increasing thermal stability considerably.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND: The molecular mechanism of urea-induced protein unfolding has not been established. It is generally thought that denaturation results from the stabilizing interactions of urea with portions of the protein that are buried in the native state and become exposed upon unfolding of the protein. RESULTS: We have performed molecular dynamics simulations of barnase (a 110 amino acid RNase from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens) with explicit water and urea molecules at 300 K and 360 K. The native conformation was unaffected in the 300 K simulations at neutral and low pH. Two of the three runs at 360 K and low pH showed some denaturation, with partial unfolding of the hydrophobic core 2. The first solvation shell has a much higher density of urea molecules (water/urea ratio ranging from 2.07 to 2.73) than the bulk (water/urea ratio of 4.56). About one half of the first-shell urea molecules are involved in hydrogen bonds with polar or charged groups on the barnase surface, and between 15% and 18% of the first-shell urea molecules participate in multiple hydrogen bonds with barnase. The more stably bound urea molecules tend to be in crevices or pockets on the barnase surface. CONCLUSIONS: The simulation results indicate that an aqueous urea solution solvates the surface of a polypeptide chain more favorably than pure water. Urea molecules interact more favorably with nonpolar groups of the protein than water does, and the presence of urea improves the interactions of water molecules with the hydrophilic groups of the protein. The results suggest that urea denaturation involves effects on both nonpolar and polar groups of proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were used to characterize the non-cooperative denaturation of the molten globule A-state of human alpha-lactalbumin by urea. A solvent of explicit urea and water molecules was used, corresponding to a urea concentration of approximately 6M. Three simulations were performed at temperatures of 293K, 360K and 400K, with lengths of 2 ns, 8 ns and 8 ns respectively. The results of the simulations were compared with experimental data from NMR studies of human alpha-lactalbumin and related peptides. During the simulations, hydrogen bonds were formed from the protein to both urea and water molecules as intra-protein hydrogen bonds were lost. Urea was shown to compete efficiently with water as both a hydrogen bond donor and acceptor. Radial distribution functions of water and urea around hydrophobic side chain atoms showed a significant increase in urea molecules in the solvation shell as the side chains became exposed during denaturation. A considerable portion of the native-like secondary structure persisted throughout the simulations. However, in the simulations at 360K and 400K, there were substantial changes in the packing of aromatic and other hydrophobic side chains in the protein, and many native contacts were lost. The results suggest that during the non-cooperative denaturation of the molten globule, secondary structure elements are stabilized by non-specific, non-native interactions.  相似文献   

5.
Zhang Z  Zhu Y  Shi Y 《Biophysical chemistry》2001,89(2-3):145-162
Molecular dynamics simulations of the S-peptide analogue AETAAAKFLREHMDS in water at 278 and 358 K, and in 8 M urea at 278 K were performed. The results show agreement with experiments. The helix is stable at low temperature (278 K), while at 358 K, unfolding is observed. The effects of urea on protein stability have been studied. The data support a model in which urea denatures proteins by: (1) diminishing the hydrophobic effect by displacing water molecules from the solvent shell around nonpolar groups; and (2) binding directly to amide units (NH and CO groups) via hydrogen bonds. The results of cluster analysis and essential dynamics analysis suggest that the mechanism of urea and thermal-induced denaturation may not be the same.  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.
Tobi D  Elber R  Thirumalai D 《Biopolymers》2003,68(3):359-369
The conformational equilibrium of a blocked valine peptide in water and aqueous urea solution is studied using molecular dynamics simulations. Pair correlation functions indicate enhanced concentration of urea near the peptide. Stronger hydrogen bonding of urea-peptide compared to water-peptide is observed with preference for helical conformation. The potential of mean force, computed using umbrella sampling, shows only small differences between urea and water solvation that are difficult to quantify. The changes in solvent structure around the peptide are explained by favorable electrostatic interactions (hydrogen bonds) of urea with the peptide backbone. There is no evidence for significant changes in hydrophobic interactions in the two conformations of the peptide in urea solution. Our simulations suggest that urea denatures proteins by preferentially forming hydrogen bonds to the peptide backbone, reducing the barrier for exposing protein residues to the solvent, and reaching the unfolded state.  相似文献   

8.
Understanding the molecular basis for protein denaturation by urea and guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) should accommodate the observation that, on a molar basis, GdmCl is generally 2-2.5-fold more effective as a protein denaturant than urea. Previous studies [Smith, J. S., and Scholtz, J. M. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 7292-7297] have suggested that the effects of GdmCl on the stability of alanine-based helical peptides can be separated into denaturant and salt effects, since adding equimolar NaCl to urea enhanced urea-induced unfolding to an extent that was close to that of Gdm. We reinvestigated this observation using an alanine-based helical peptide (alahel) that lacks side chain electrostatic contributions to stability, and compared the relative denaturant sensitivities of this peptide with that of tryptophan zipper peptides (trpzip) whose native conformations are stabilized largely by cross-strand indole ring interactions. In contrast to the observations of Smith and Scholtz, GdmCl was only slightly more powerful as a denaturant of alahel than urea in salt-free buffer (the denaturant m value m(GdmCl)/m(urea) ratio = 1.4), and the denaturation of alahel by urea exhibited only a small dependence on NaCl or KCl. The trpzip peptides were much more sensitive to GdmCl than to urea (m(GdmCl)/m(urea) = 3.5-4). These observations indicate that the m(GdmCl)/m(urea) ratio of 2-2.5 for proteins results from a combination of effects on the multiple contributions to protein stability, for which GdmCl may be only slightly more effective than urea (e.g., hydrogen bonds) or considerably more effective than urea (e.g., indole-indole interactions).  相似文献   

9.
Understanding the conformational transitions that trigger the aggregation and amyloidogenesis of otherwise soluble peptides at atomic resolution is of fundamental relevance for the design of effective therapeutic agents against amyloid-related disorders. In the present study the transition from ideal alpha-helical to beta-hairpin conformations is revealed by long timescale molecular dynamics simulations in explicit water solvent, for two well-known amyloidogenic peptides: the H1 peptide from prion protein and the Abeta(12-28) fragment from the Abeta(1-42) peptide responsible for Alzheimer's disease. The simulations highlight the unfolding of alpha-helices, followed by the formation of bent conformations and a final convergence to ordered in register beta-hairpin conformations. The beta-hairpins observed, despite different sequences, exhibit a common dynamic behavior and the presence of a peculiar pattern of the hydrophobic side-chains, in particular in the region of the turns. These observations hint at a possible common aggregation mechanism for the onset of different amyloid diseases and a common mechanism in the transition to the beta-hairpin structures. Furthermore the simulations presented herein evidence the stabilization of the alpha-helical conformations induced by the presence of an organic fluorinated cosolvent. The results of MD simulation in 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE)/water mixture provide further evidence that the peptide coating effect of TFE molecules is responsible for the stabilization of the soluble helical conformation.  相似文献   

10.
Computer simulation of the conformations of short antigenic peptides (5-10 residues) either free or bound to their receptor, the major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-encoded glycoprotein H-2 Ld, was employed to explain experimentally determined differences in the antigenic activities within a set of related peptides. Starting for each sequence from the most probable conformations disclosed by a pattern-recognition technique, several energy-minimized structures were subjected to molecular dynamics simulations (MD) either in vacuo or solvated by water molecules. Notably, antigenic potencies were found to correlate to the peptides propensity to form and maintain an overall alpha-helical conformation through regular i,i + 4 hydrogen bonds. Accordingly, less active or inactive peptides showed a strong tendency to form i,i + 3 hydrogen bonds at their N-terminal end. Experimental data documented that the C-terminal residue is critical for interaction of the peptide with H-2 Ld. This finding could be satisfactorily explained by a 3-D Q.S.A.R. analysis postulating interactions between ligand and receptor by hydrophobic forces. A 3-D model is proposed for the complex between a high-affinity nonapeptide and the H-2 Ld receptor. First, the H-2 Ld molecule was built from X-ray coordinates of two homologous proteins: HLA-A2 and HLA-Aw68, energy-minimized and studied by MD simulations. With HLA-A2 as template, the only realistic simulation was achieved for a solvated model with minor deviations of the MD mean structure from the X-ray conformation. Water simulation of the H-2 Ld protein in complex with the antigenic nonapeptide was then achieved with the template-derived optimal parameters. The bound peptide retains mainly its alpha-helical conformation and binds to hydrophobic residues of H-2 Ld that correspond to highly polymorphic positions of MHC proteins. The orientation of the nonapeptide in the binding cleft is in accordance with the experimentally determined distribution of its MHC receptor-binding residues (agretope residues). Thus, computer simulation was successfully employed to explain functional data and predicts alpha-helical conformation for the bound peptide.  相似文献   

11.
Molecular dynamics simulations of alamethicin in methanol were carried out with either a regular alpha-helical conformation or the x-ray crystal structure as starting structures. The structures rapidly converged to a well-defined hydrogen-bonding pattern with mixed alpha-helical and 3(10)-helical hydrogen bonds, consistent with NMR structural characterization, and did not unfold throughout the 1-ns simulation, despite some sizable backbone fluctuations involving reversible breaking of helical hydrogen bonds. Bending of the helical structure around residues Aib10-Aib13 was associated with reversible flips of the peptide bonds involving G11 (Aib10-G11 or G11-L12 peptide bonds), yielding discrete structural states in which the Aib10 carbonyl or (rarely) the G11 carbonyl was oriented away from the peptide helix. These peptide bond reversals could be accommodated without greatly perturbing the adjacent helical structure, and intramolecular hydrogen bonding was generally maintained in bent states through the formation of new (non-alpha or 3[10]) hydrogen bonds with good geometries: G11 NH-V9 CO (inverse gamma turn), Aib13 NH-Aib8 CO (pi-helix) and, rarely, L12 NH- Q7 NH (pi-helix). These observations may reconcile potentially conflicting NMR structural information for alamethicin in methanol, in which evidence for conformational flexibility in the peptide sequence before P14 (G11-Aib13) contrasts with the stability of backbone amide NH groups to exchange with solvent. Similar reversible reorientation of the Thr11-Gly12 peptide bond of melittin is also observed in dynamics simulations in methanol (R. B. Sessions, N. Gibbs, and C. E. Dempsey, submitted). This phenomenon may have some role in the orientation of the peptide carbonyl in solvating the channel lumen in membrane ion channel states of these peptides.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of insertion of lactic acid (Lac) residues into peptide helices has been probed using specifically designed sequences. The crystal structures of 11-residue and 14-residue depsipeptides Boc-Val-Val-Ala-Leu-Val-Lac-Leu-Aib-Val-Ala-Leu-OMe (1) and Boc-Val-Ala-Leu-Aib-Val-Ala-Leu-Val-Lac-Leu-Aib-Val-Ala-Leu-OMe (3), containing centrally positioned Lac residues, have been determined. The structure of an 11-residue peptide Boc-Val-Ala-Leu-Aib-Val-Ala-Leu-Aib-Val-Ala-Leu-OMe (2), analog of a which is an amide previously determined Lac-containing depsipeptide, Boc-Val-Ala-Leu-Aib-Val-Lac-Leu-Aib-Val-Ala-Leu-OMe I. L. Karle, C. Das, and P. Balaram, Biopolymers, Vol. 59, (2001) pp. 276-289], is also reported. Peptide 1 adopts a helical fold, which is stabilized by mixture of 4-->1 and 5-->1 hydrogen bonds. Peptide 2 adopts a completely alpha-helical conformation stabilized by eight successive 5-->1 hydrogen bonds. Peptide 3 appears to be predominately alpha-helical, with seven 5-->1 hydrogen bonds and three 4-->1 interaction interspersed in the sequence. In the structure of peptide 3 in addition to water molecules in the head-to-tail region, hydration at an internal segment of the helix is also observed. A comparison of five related peptide helices, containing a single Lac residue, reveals that the hydroxy acid can be comfortably accommodated at interior positions in the helix, with the closest C=O...O distances lying between 2.8 and 3.3 A.  相似文献   

13.
An understanding of the structural transitions that an alpha-helix undergoes will help to elucidate such motions in proteins and their role in protein folding. We present the results of molecular dynamics simulations to investigate these transitions in a short polyalanine peptide (13 residues) both in vacuo and in the presence of solvent. The denaturation of this peptide was monitored as a function of temperature (ranging from 5 to 200 degrees C). In vacuo, the helical state predominated at all temperatures, whereas in solution the helix melted with increasing temperature. The peptide was predominantly helical at low temperature in solution, while at intermediate temperatures the peptide spent the bulk of the time fluctuating between different conformations with intermediate amounts of helix, e.g. not completely helical nor entirely non-helical. Many of these conformations consisted of short helical segments with intervening non-helical residues. At high temperature the peptide unfolded and adopted various collapsed unstructured states. The intrahelical hydrogen bonds that break at high temperature were not fully compensated by hydrogen bonds with water molecules in the partially unfolded forms of the peptide. Increases in temperature disrupted both the helical structure and the peptide-water interactions. Water played a major but indirect role in facilitating unfolding, as opposed to specifically competing for the intrapeptide hydrogen bonds. The implications of our results to protein folding are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The amino terminus of subunit-2 of influenza virus hemagglutinin (NHA2) plays a crucial role in the induction of fusion between viral and endosomal membranes leading to the infection of a cell. Three synthetic analogs with an amino acid sequence corresponding to NHA2 of variant hemagglutinins were studied in a monolayer set up. Comparison of the interaction of a fusion-active and two fusion-defective analogs with a lipid monolayer revealed a greater surface activity of the fusion-active analog. Pronounced differences were found if the pure peptides were spread at the air/water interface; the fusion-active analog showed a higher collapse pressure and a greater limiting molecular area. Circular dichroism measurements on collected lipid monolayers indicated a high content of alpha-helical structure for the fusion-active and one of the fusion-defective analogs. A simple relation between alpha-helical content and fusogenicity does not seem to exist. Instead, the extent of penetration, a defined tertiary structure or orientation of the alpha-helical peptide may be essential for its membrane perturbing activity.  相似文献   

15.
We have performed molecular dynamics simulations of the interactions of two alpha-helical anti-microbial peptides, magainin2 and its synthetic analog of MSI-78, with palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) lipid bilayers. We used various initial positions and orientations of the peptide with respect to the lipid bilayer, including a surface-bound state parallel to the interface, a trans-membrane state, and a partially inserted state. Our 20 ns long simulations show that both magainin2 and MSI-78 are most stable in the lipid environment, with the peptide destabilized to different extents in both aqueous and lipid/water interfacial environments. We found that there are strong specific interactions between the lysine residues of the peptides and the lipid head-group regions. MSI-78, owing to its large number of lysines, shows better binding characteristics and overall stability when compared to magainin2. We also find that both peptides destabilize the bilayer environment, as observed by the increase in lipid tail disorder and the induction of local curvature on the lipid head-groups by the peptides. From all the simulations, we conclude that the hydrogen bonding interactions between the lysines of the peptides and the oxygens of the polar lipid head-groups are the strongest and determine the overall peptide binding characteristics to the lipids.  相似文献   

16.
Molecular dynamics simulations of ion channel peptides alamethicin and melittin, solvated in methanol at 27 degrees C, were run with either regular alpha-helical starting structures (alamethicin, 1 ns; melittin 500 ps either with or without chloride counterions), or with the x-ray crystal coordinates of alamethicin as a starting structure (1 ns). The hydrogen bond patterns and stabilities were characterized by analysis of the dynamics trajectories with specified hydrogen bond angle and distance criteria, and were compared with hydrogen bond patterns and stabilities previously determined from high-resolution NMR structural analysis and amide hydrogen exchange measurements in methanol. The two alamethicin simulations rapidly converged to a persistent hydrogen bond pattern with a high level of 3(10) hydrogen bonding involving the amide NH's of residues 3, 4, 9, 15, and 18. The 3(10) hydrogen bonds stabilizing amide NH's of residues C-terminal to P2 and P14 were previously proposed to explain their high amide exchange stabilities. The absence, or low levels of 3(10) hydrogen bonds at the N-terminus or for A15 NH, respectively, in the melittin simulations, is also consistent with interpretations from amide exchange analysis. Perturbation of helical hydrogen bonding in the residues before P14 (Aib10-P14, alamethicin; T11-P14, melittin) was characterized in both peptides by variable hydrogen bond patterns that included pi and gamma hydrogen bonds. The general agreement in hydrogen bond patterns determined in the simulations and from spectroscopic analysis indicates that with suitable conditions (including solvent composition and counterions where required), local hydrogen-bonded secondary structure in helical peptides may be predicted from dynamics simulations from alpha-helical starting structures. Each peptide, particularly alamethicin, underwent some large amplitude structural fluctuations in which several hydrogen bonds were cooperatively broken. The recovery of the persistent hydrogen bonding patterns after these fluctuations demonstrates the stability of intramolecular hydrogen-bonded secondary structure in methanol (consistent with spectroscopic observations), and is promising for simulations on extended timescales to characterize the nature of the backbone fluctuations that underlie amide exchange from isolated helical polypeptides.  相似文献   

17.
The central domain of smooth muscle caldesmon contains a highly charged region consisting of ten 13-residue repeats. Experimental evidence obtained from the intact protein and fragments thereof suggests that this entire region forms a single stretch of stable alpha-helix. We have carried out molecular dynamics simulations on peptides consisting of one, two and three repeats to examine the mechanism of alpha-helical stability of the central domain at the atomic level. All three peptides show high helical stability on the timescale of the MD simulations. Deviations from alpha-helical structure in all the simulations arise mainly from the formation of long stretches of pi-helix. Interconversion between alpha-helical and pi-helical conformations occurs through insertion of water molecules into alpha-helical hydrogen bonds and subsequent formation of reverse turns. The alpha-helical structure is stabilized by electrostatic interactions (salt bridges) between oppositely charged sidechains with i,i+4 spacings, while the pi-helix is stabilized by i,i+5 salt bridge interactions. Possible i,i+3 salt bridges are of minor importance. There is a strong preference for salt bridges with a Glu residue N-terminal to a basic sidechain as compared to the opposite orientation. In the double and triple repeat peptides, strong i,i+4 salt bridges exist between the last Glu residue of one repeat and the first Lys residue of the next. This demonstrates a relationship between the repetitive nature of the central domain sequence and its ability to form very long stretches of alpha-helical structure.  相似文献   

18.
The interactions of bovine serum albumin (BSA) with urea/water were investigated by computer simulation. It was revealed that the BSA-hydrophobic residues in urea solutions favored contact with urea more than with water. Energy decomposition analysis showed that van der Waals energy was the dominant driving force behind urea affinity for hydrophobic residues, whereas coulombic attraction was largely responsible for water affinity for these residues. Meanwhile, urea–BSA hydrogen bond energies were found to be weaker than water–BSA hydrogen bond energies. The greater strength of water–BSA hydrogen bonds than urea–BSA hydrogen bonds, and the opposing preferential interaction between the BSA and urea suggest that disruption of hydrophobic interaction predominates urea–protein denaturation. In pure water, hydrophobic residues showed aggregation tendencies at 323 K, suggesting an increase in hydrophobicity, while at 353 K the residues were partly denatured due to loss of hydrogen bonds; thus, disruption of hydrophobic interactions appeared to contribute less to thermal denaturation.  相似文献   

19.
Gupta G  Sinha S  Surolia A 《Proteins》2008,72(2):754-760
The unfolding pathway of banana lectin from Musa paradisiaca was determined by isothermal denaturation induced by the chaotrope GdnCl. The unfolding was found to be a reversible process. The data obtained by isothermal denaturation provided information on conformational stability of banana lectin. The high values of DeltaG of unfolding at various temperatures indicated the strength of intersubunit interactions. It was found that banana lectin is a very stable and denatures at high chaotrope concentrations only. The basis of the stability may be attributed to strong hydrogen bonds of the order 2.5-3.1 A at the dimeric interface along with the presence of water bridges. This is perhaps very unique example in proteins where subunit association is not a consequence of the predominance of hydrophobic interactions.  相似文献   

20.
The structure of denatured alpha-lactalbumin (alpha-LA) has been characterized using the method of disulfide scrambling. Under denaturing conditions (urea, guanidine hydrochloride, guanidine thiocyanate, organic solvent or elevated temperature) and in the presence of thiol initiator, alpha-LA denatures by shuffling its four native disulfide bonds and converts to a mixture of fully oxidized scrambled structures. Analysis by reversed-phase HPLC reveals that the denatured alpha-LA comprises a minimum of 45 fractions of scrambled isomers. Among them, six well populated isomers have been isolated and structurally characterized. Their relative concentrations, which represent the fingerprinting of the denatured alpha-LA, vary substantially under different denaturing conditions. These results permit independent plotting of the denaturation and unfolding curves of alpha-LA. Most importantly, unique isomers of partially unfolded alpha-LA were shown to populate at mild and selected denaturing conditions. Organic solvent disrupts preferentially the hydrophobic alpha-helical domain, generating a predominant isomer containing two native disulfide bonds at the beta-sheet domain and two scrambled disulfide bonds at the alpha-helical region. Thermal denaturation selectively unfolds the beta-sheet domain of alpha-LA, producing a prevalent isomer that exhibits structural characteristics of the molten globule state of alpha-LA.  相似文献   

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