首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 386 毫秒
1.
The structural stability of phaseolin was determined by using absorbance, circular dichroism (CD), fluorescence emission, and fluorescence polarization anisotropy to monitor denaturation induced by urea, guanidinium chloride (GdmCl),pH changes, increasing temperature, or a combination thereof. Initial results indicated that phaseolin remained folded to a similar extent in the presence or absence of 6.0 M urea or GdmCl at room temperature. In 6.0 M GdmCl, phaseolin denatures at approximately 65°C when probed with absorbance, CD, and fluorescence polarization anisotropy. The transition occurs at lower temperatures by decreasingpH. Kinetic measurements of denaturation using CD indicated that the denaturation is slow below 55°C and is associated with an activation energy of 52 kcal/mol in 6.0 M GdmCl. In addition, kinetic measurement using fluorescence emission indicated that the single tryptophan residue was sensitive to at least two steps of the denaturation process. The fluorescence emission appeared to reflect some other structural perturbation than protein denaturation, as fluorescence inflection occurred approximately 5°C prior to the changes observed in absorbance, CD, and fluorescence polarization anisotropy.  相似文献   

2.
The structural stability of phaseolin was determined by using absorbance, circular dichroism (CD), fluorescence emission, and fluorescence polarization anisotropy to monitor denaturation induced by urea, guanidinium chloride (GdmCl),pH changes, increasing temperature, or a combination thereof. Initial results indicated that phaseolin remained folded to a similar extent in the presence or absence of 6.0 M urea or GdmCl at room temperature. In 6.0 M GdmCl, phaseolin denatures at approximately 65°C when probed with absorbance, CD, and fluorescence polarization anisotropy. The transition occurs at lower temperatures by decreasingpH. Kinetic measurements of denaturation using CD indicated that the denaturation is slow below 55°C and is associated with an activation energy of 52 kcal/mol in 6.0 M GdmCl. In addition, kinetic measurement using fluorescence emission indicated that the single tryptophan residue was sensitive to at least two steps of the denaturation process. The fluorescence emission appeared to reflect some other structural perturbation than protein denaturation, as fluorescence inflection occurred approximately 5°C prior to the changes observed in absorbance, CD, and fluorescence polarization anisotropy.  相似文献   

3.
A high thermal stability is observed for the five-stranded alpha-helical coiled-coil domain of cartilage oligomeric matrix protein COMP. It does not unfold in non-denaturing buffer between 0 and 100 degrees C and thermal denaturation is only achieved at high concentrations of guanidinium chloride (4-6 M). In these solutions the protein structure is lost at decreasing (cold denaturation) and increasing temperatures (heat denaturation). In the cold denaturation region, the melting profile showed deviations from the theory of Privalov et al. [P.L. Privalov, V. Griko Yu, S. Venyaminov, V.P. Kutyshenko, Cold denaturation of myoglobin, J. Mol. Biol. 190 (1986) 487-498] probably due to deviations from a two-state mechanism. High thermal stability as well as cold and heat denaturation was also observed for a mutant of the coiled-coil domain of COMP in which glutamine 54 was replaced by isoleucine but it still forms pentamer. The melting temperatures in plain buffer for the heat denaturation of COMP coiled-coil domain and its mutant obtained by extrapolation to zero molar guanidinium chloride concentration are approximately 160 and 220 degrees C, respectively, which groups them among the most stable proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Recombinant human macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhM-CSF), a homodimeric, disulfide bonded protein, was expressed in Escherichia coli in the form of inclusion bodies. Reduced and denatured rhM-CSF monomers were refolded in the presence of a thiol mixture (reduced and oxidized glutathione) and a low concentration of denaturing agent (urea or guanidinium chloride). Refolding was monitored by nonreducing gel electrophoresis and recovery of bioactivity. The effects of denaturant type and concentration, protein concentration, concentration of thiol/disulfide reagents, temperature, and presence of impurities on the kinetics of rhM-CSF renaturation were investigated. Low denaturant concentrations (<0.5 M urea) and high protein concentrations (>0.4 mg/ml) in the refolding mixture resulted in increased formation of aggregates, although aggregation was never significant even when refolding was carried out at room temperature. Higher protein concentration resulted in higher rates but did not lead to increased yields, due to the formation of unwanted aggregates. Experiments conducted at room temperature resulted in slightly higher rates than those conducted at 4 degrees C. Although the initial renaturation rate for solubilized inclusion body protein without purification was higher than that of the reversed-phase purified reduced denatured rhM-CSF, the final renaturation yield was much higher for the purified material. A maximum refolding yield of 95% was obtained for the purified material at the following refolding conditions: 0.5 M urea, 50 mM Tris, 1.25 mM DTT, 2 mM GSH, 2 mM GSSG, 22 degrees C, pH 8, [protein] = 0.13 mg/ml.  相似文献   

5.
Millisecond internal dynamics of native and inactivated actin from rabbit skeletal muscle was examined using room temperature phosphorescence. Inactivated actin was prepared by incubation of G-actin at 70 degrees C, by treatment with 4 M urea or 1.5 M guanidinium hydrochloride, renaturation from fully unfolded state or by Ca2+ ion removal. It was shown that inactivation of actin, irrespective of the denaturation procedure applied, leads to a sharp decrease of millisecond fluctuations of the protein structure. Restriction of the slow intramolecular mobility in inactivated actin can result from changes of the protein conformation and/or specific association of macromolecules.  相似文献   

6.
Maltodextrin phosphorylase (MalP) from Escherichia coli and starch phosphorylase (StP) from Corynebacterium callunae are significantly stabilized in the presence of phosphate against inactivation by elevated temperature or urea. The stabilizing effect of phosphate was observed at ion concentrations below 50 mM. Therefore, it is probably due to preferential binding of phosphate to the folded conformations of the phosphorylases. For StP, phosphate binding inhibited the dissociation of the active-site cofactor pyridoxal 5′-phosphate. Phosphate-liganded StP was at least 500-fold more stable at 60d`C than the free enzyme at the same temperature. It showed an apparent transition midpoint of 5.2 M for irreversible denaturation by urea, and this midpoint was increased by a denaturant concentration of 4M relative to the corresponding transition midpoint of free StP in urea. The mechanisms of inactivation and denaturation of MalP at 45d`C and by urea involve formation of a cofactor-containing, insoluble protein aggregate. Under denaturing conditions, phosphate was shown to inhibit aggregation of the reversibly inactivated MalP dimer.  相似文献   

7.
The denaturation of pantetheinase (pantetheine hydrolase, EC 3.5.1.-) was followed in guanidinium chloride using tyrosyl and tryptophanyl residues as probes in connection with change in enzymatic activity. Movements of tryptophanyl and tyrosyl residues during denaturation were studied by second-derivative and fluorescence spectroscopy and the number of these amino acids present in the protein was calculated from spectroscopic data. Pantetheinase shows a very high resistance to denaturation, being completely unfolded at guanidinium chloride concentration higher than 6.5 M. Monitoring enzymatic activity shows that inactivation of the enzyme occurred before noticeable conformational changes were detected and it is suggested that the conformation of the active site is flexible and easily perturbable compared to the protein as a whole. This inactivation is reversible, as shown by renaturation experiments. Second-derivative and fluorescence spectra showed also that tyrosyl and tryptophanyl residues are largely exposed in the native protein, confirming its hydrophobic behavior.  相似文献   

8.
We have previously shown that the denaturation of TK with urea follows a non-aggregating though irreversible denaturation pathway in which the cofactor binding appears to become altered but without dissociating, then followed at higher urea by partial denaturation of the homodimer prior to any further unfolding or dissociation of the two monomers. Urea is not typically present during biocatalysis, whereas access to TK enzymes that retain activity at increased temperature and extreme pH would be useful for operation under conditions that increase substrate and product stability or solubility. To provide further insight into the underlying causes of its deactivation in process conditions, we have characterised the effects of temperature and pH on the structure, stability, aggregation and activity of Escherichia coli transketolase. The activity of TK was initially found to progressively improve after pre-incubation at increasing temperatures. Loss of activity at higher temperature and low pH resulted primarily from protein denaturation and subsequent irreversible aggregation. By contrast, high pH resulted in the formation of a native-like state that was only partially inactive. The apo-TK enzyme structure content also increased at pH 9 to converge on that of the holo-TK. While cofactor dissociation was previously proposed for high pH deactivation, the observed structural changes in apo-TK but not holo-TK indicate a more complex mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
The Pyrococcus furiosus endo-beta-1,3-glucanase belongs to the subfamily of laminarinase, which can be classified as "all beta proteins" as confirmed by deconvolution of far-UV CD and FTIR spectra. The persistence of a significant amount of tertiary structure in 7.9 M GdmCl, as indicated by near-UV CD spectroscopy, accompanied by a red-shift of the maximum fluorescence emission wavelength is a peculiar property of this hyperthermophilic endoglucanase. The possibility to observe tertiary structure elements under extremely denaturing conditions is notable and is limited to only a few examples. The unusual resistance toward guanidinium chloride denaturation is paralleled by a notable stability at extremely low pH and at high temperature. The analysis of the protein spectral properties indicates that the secondary structure elements are preserved down to pH 1.0 and up to 90 degrees C at pH 7.4 and pH 3.0. The study of the conditions that determine the persistence of residual structure at high denaturant concentration and the examination of these structures are particularly interesting because these state(s) may be preliminary or coincident with the coalescence of protein aggregates or to the formation of amyloid-like fibrils, and they may serve as seeds of protein folding.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The soluble ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) from Micrococcus lysodeikticus underwent a major unfolding transition when solutions of the enzyme at pH 7.5 were heated. The midpoint occurred at 46 degrees C when monitored by changes in enzymic activity and intrinsic fluorescence, and at 49 degrees C when monitored by circular dichroism. The products of thermal denaturation retained much secondary structure, and no evidence of subunit dissociation was detected after cooling at 20 degrees C. The thermal transition was irreversible, and thiol groups were not involved in the irreversibility. The presence of ATP, adenylyl imidodiphosphate, CaCl2 or higher concentrations of ATPase conferred stability against thermal denaturation, but did not prevent the irreversibility one denaturation had taken place. In the presence of guanidinium chloride, thermal denaturation occurred at lower temperatures. The midpoints of the transition were 45 degrees C in 0.25 M-, 38 degrees C in 0.5 M-and 30 degrees C in 0.75 M-denaturant. In the highest concentration of guanidinium chloride a similar unfolding transition induced by cooling was observed. Its midpoint was 9 degrees C, and the temperature of maximum stability of the protein was 20 degrees C. The discontinuities occurring the the Arrhenius plots of the activity of this enzyme had no counterpart in variations in the far-u.v. circular dichroism or intrinsic fluorescence of the protein at the same temperature.  相似文献   

12.
Potentialities and limitations of the use of (1)H NMRD technique for the characterization of the hydration properties of unfolded or partially folded states of proteins are discussed. The copper(I) form of monomeric Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase in its folded state and in the presence of 4M guanidinium chloride is taken as case system. The dispersion profile, analyzed with an extended relaxation matrix analysis, indicates the presence of long-lived water molecules in the folded state. The observed increase in relaxation at high field upon addition of guanidinium chloride indicates an increase in the number of solvation protons interacting with the protein and exchanging with a time shorter than the protein reorientational time. The observed effect is consistent with an exposed protein surface of SOD in the presence of 4M guanidinium chloride smaller than what could be expected for a random coil.  相似文献   

13.
Intestinal brush border proteins consist of an enzymatically active hydrophilic moiety attached to a hydrophobic tail. Papain dissociates the hydrophilic part by cleaving off the hydrophobic tail, whereas the detergentTriton X-100 solubilizes the whole molecule. Denaturation by 8 M urea or 4 M guanidinium chloride does not alter the structure of the papain-solubilized enzyme. An appreciable alteration of the structure of detergent-solubilized enzyme was observed on denaturation. The difference spectra of Triton X-100 (1%)—solubilized enzyme and its urea denatured form shifts and intensifies, with increase in the concentration of the denaturant with an isobestic point at 252 nm. A new band at 280 nm also appears at 4 M urea concentration. Papain-solubilized glucoamylase has an ∞ -helical conformation in solution unlike the detergentsolubilized fraction. An elongated structure for the papain solubilized enzyme is inferred from the urea denaturation studies and from molecular weight determinations.  相似文献   

14.
The denaturation of immunoglobulin G and its light chains by guanidinium chloride at 25°C was followed using the dilatometric method. From results of the dilatometric measurements the differences between the partial molar volumes of the proteins in water and in guanidinium chloride solutions of various concentrations, respectively, have been obtained. The differences reflect the extent of unfolding as well as the denaturant binding to the protein. Several experiments were also performed in which the protein disulfide bonds were reduced by dithioerythritol.The volume change produced by the reduction of one mole of disulfide bonds of immunoglobulin G in 6 M guanidinium chloride was found to be the same as that for oxidized glutathione; the value was ?0.9 ml/mol.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of biotin binding on the thermal stability of streptavidin (STV) and avidin (AVD) was evaluated using differential scanning calorimetry. Biotin binding increases the midpoint of temperature Tm of thermally induced denaturation of STV and AVD in phosphate buffer from 75 and 83 degrees C to 112 and 117 degrees C at full biotin saturation, respectively. This thermostability is the highest reported for proteins coming from either mesophilic or thermophilic organisms. In both proteins, biotin also increases the calorimetric enthalpy and the cooperativity of the unfolding. Thermal stability of STV was also evaluated in the presence of high concentrations of urea or guanidinium hydrochloride (GuHCl). In 6 M GuHCl, STV remains as a tetramer and the Tm of the STV-biotin complex is centered at 108 degrees C, a few degrees below the value obtained in phosphate buffer. On the contrary, STV under fully saturating condition remains mainly in its dimeric form in 8 M urea and the thermogram shows two endotherms. The main endotherm at a lower temperature has been ascribed to the dimeric liganded state with a Tm of 87 degrees C, and the higher temperature endotherm to the tetrameric liganded form with a Tm of 106 degrees C. As the thermostability of unliganded protein in the presence of urea is unchanged upon binding we related the extremely high thermal stability of this protein to both an increase in structural ordering and compactness with the preservation of the tetramer integrity.  相似文献   

16.
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) provides authentic and accurate value of DeltaC(p)(X), the constant-pressure heat capacity change associated with the N (native state)<-->X (heat denatured state), the heat-induced denaturation equilibrium of the protein in the absence of a chemical denaturant. If X retains native-like buried hydrophobic interaction, DeltaC(p)(X) must be less than DeltaC(p)(D), the constant-pressure heat capacity change associated with the transition, N<-->D, where the state D is not only more unfolded than X but it also has its all groups exposed to water. One problem is that for most proteins D is observed only in the presence of chemical denaturants such as guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) and urea. Another problem is that DSC cannot yield authentic DeltaC(p)(D), for its measurement invokes the existence of putative specific binding sites for the chemical denaturants on N and D. We have developed a non-calorimetric method for the measurements of DeltaC(p)(D), which uses thermodynamic data obtained from the isothermal GdmCl (or urea)-induced denaturation and heat-induced denaturation in the presence of the chemical denaturant concentration at which significant concentrations of both N and D exist. We show that for each of the proteins (ribonuclease-A, lysozyme, alpha-lactalbumin and chymotrypsinogen) DeltaC(p)(D) is significantly higher than DeltaC(p)(X). DeltaC(p)(D) of the protein is also compared with that estimated using the known heat capacities of amino acid residues and their fractional area exposed on denaturation.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of pH, mental ions, and denaturing reagents on the thermal stability of thermophilic alpha-amylase [EC 3.2.1.1] were examined. The enzyme was most stable at around pH 9.2, which is coincident with the isoelectric point of the enzyme. The stability of the enzyme was increased by the addition of calcium, strontium, and sodium ions. The addition of calcium ions markedly stabilized the enzyme. The protective effects of calcium and sodium ions were additive. At room temperature, no detectable destruction of the helical structure of the enzyme was observed after incubation for 1 hr in the presence of 1% sodium dodecylsulfate, 8 M urea or 6 M guanidine-HC1. The addition of 8 M urea or 6 M guanidine-HC1 lowered the thermal denaturation temperature of the enzyme. The enzyme contained one atom of tightly bound intrinsic calcium per molecule which could not be removed by electrodialysis unless the enzyme was denatured. The rate constants of inactivation and denaturation reactions in the absence and presence of calcium ions were measured and thermodynamic parameters were determined. The presence of calcium ions caused a remarkable decrease in the activation entropy.  相似文献   

18.
Studies of the denaturation and partial renaturation of ovalbumin   总被引:6,自引:4,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
1. The denaturation of ovalbumin by the reagents sodium dodecyl sulphate and guanidinium chloride was investigated, by following the changes in sedimentation velocity, optical rotatory dispersion and viscosity as a function of denaturant concentration. 2. With sodium dodecyl sulphate both the optical-rotatory-dispersion parameters a(0) and b(0) become more negative, the sedimentation coefficient decreases and the viscosity increases; significant differences in the denaturation profiles are observed. The change in each parameter is indicative of only limited denaturation. 3. With guanidinium chloride the transition occurs over the concentration range 1-4m: more extensive changes occur in all the physical parameters than with sodium dodecyl sulphate. The values of a(0) and b(0) are indicative of complete denaturation. Reduction by mercaptoethanol produces only minor further changes. 4. Renaturation was attempted from both denaturants, the removal of reagent being accomplished reversibly by controlled slow dialysis. Partial renaturation was observed, but aggregated or insoluble material was produced in both cases at relatively low concentrations of denaturant. Similar behaviour was observed with fully reduced protein in guanidinium chloride-mercaptoethanol; complete renaturation could not be brought about even at very low protein concentrations.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of our study was to investigate how denaturing agents commonly used in protein analysis influence the labeling between a reactive molecule and proteins. For this reason, we investigated the labeling of ovalbumin (OVA) as a globular model protein with p-hydroxymercurybenzoate (pHMB) in its native state (phosphate buffer solution) and in different denaturing conditions (8 mol L−1 urea, 3 mol L−1 guanidinium thiocyanate, 6 mol L−1 guanidinium chloride, 0.2% sodium dodecyl sulfate, and 20% methanol). In addition to chemical denaturation, thermal denaturation was also tested. The protein was pre-column simultaneously denatured and derivatized, and the pHMB-labeled denatured OVA complexes were analyzed by size exclusion chromatography (SEC) coupled online with chemical vapor generation–atomic fluorescence spectrometry (CVG–AFS). The number of –SH groups titrated greatly depends on the protein structure in solution. Indeed, we found that, depending on the adopted denaturing conditions, OVA gave different aggregate species that influence the complexation process. The results were compared with those obtained by a common alternative procedure for the titration of –SH groups that employs monobromobimane (mBBr) as tagging molecule and molecular fluorescence spectroscopy as detection technique.  相似文献   

20.
Y V Griko  P L Privalov 《Biochemistry》1992,31(37):8810-8815
Temperature-induced changes of the states of beta-lactoglobulin have been studied calorimetrically. In the presence of a high concentration of urea this protein shows not only heat but also cold denaturation. Its heat denaturation is approximated very closely by a two-state transition, while the cold denaturation deviates considerably from the two-state transition and this deviation increases as the temperature decreases. The heat effect of cold denaturation is opposite in sign to that of heat denaturation and is noticeably larger in magnitude. This difference in magnitude is caused by the temperature-dependent negative heat effect of additional binding of urea to the polypeptide chain of the protein upon its unfolding, which decreases the positive enthalpy of heat denaturation and increases the negative enthalpy of cold denaturation. The binding of urea considerably increases the partial heat capacity of the protein, especially in the denatured state. However, when corrected for the heat capacity effect of urea binding, the partial heat capacity of the denatured protein is close in magnitude to that expected for the unfolded polypeptide chain in aqueous solution without urea but only for temperatures below 10 degrees C. At higher temperatures, the heat capacity of the denatured protein is lower than that expected for the unfolded polypeptide chain. It appears that at temperatures above 10 degrees C not all the surface of the beta-lactoglobulin polypeptide chain is exposed to the solvent, even in the presence of 6 M urea; i.e., the denatured protein is not completely unfolded and unfolds only at temperatures lower than 10 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号