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1.
There is considerable interest in the structure of the denatured state and in the role local interactions play in protein stability and protein folding. Studies of peptide fragments provide one method to assess local conformational preferences which may be present in the denatured state under native-like conditions. A set of peptides corresponding to the individual elements of secondary structure derived from the N-terminal domain of the ribosomal protein L9 have been synthesized. This small 56 residue protein adopts a mixed alpha-beta topology and has been shown to fold rapidly in an apparent two-state fashion. The conformational preferences of each peptide have been analyzed by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Peptides corresponding to each of the three beta-stands and to the first alpha-helix are unstructured as judged by CD and NMR. In contrast, a peptide corresponding to the C-terminal helix is remarkably structured. This 17 residue peptide is 53 % helical at pH 5.4, 4 degrees C. Two-dimensional NMR studies demonstrate that the helical structure is distributed approximately uniformly throughout the peptide, although there is some evidence for fraying at the C terminus. Detailed analysis of the NMR spectra indicate that the helix is stabilized, in part, by a native N-capping interaction involving Thr40. A mutant peptide which lacks Thr40 is only 32 % helical. pH and ionic strength-dependent studies suggested that charge charge interactions make only a modest net contribution to the stability of the peptide. The protein contains a trans proline peptide bond located at the first position of the C-terminal helix. NMR analysis of the helical peptide and of a smaller peptide containing the proline residue indicates that only a small amount of cis proline isomer (8 %) is likely to be populated in the unfolded state.  相似文献   

2.
The 62 residue IgG binding domain of protein L consists of a central alpha-helix packed on a four-stranded beta-sheet formed by N and C-terminal beta-hairpins. The overall topology of the protein is quite symmetric: the beta-hairpins have similar lengths and make very similar interactions with the central helix. Characterization of the effects of 70 point mutations distributed throughout the protein on the kinetics of folding and unfolding reveals that this symmetry is completely broken during folding; the first beta-hairpin is largely structured while the second beta-hairpin and helix are largely disrupted in the folding transition state ensemble. The results are not consistent with a "hydrophobic core first" picture of protein folding; the first beta-hairpin appears to be at least as ordered at the rate limiting step in folding as the hydrophobic core.  相似文献   

3.
We use a simple off-lattice Langevin model of protein folding to characterize the folding and unfolding of a fast-folding, 46 residue three-helix bundle. Under conditions at which the C-terminal helix is 30 % stable, we observe a clear three-state folding mechanism. In the on-pathway intermediate state, the middle and C-terminal helices are folded and in contact with each other, while the N-terminal region remains disordered. Nevertheless, under these conditions this intermediate is thermodynamically unstable relative to its unfolded state. The first and highest folding barrier corresponds to the organization of the hinge between the middle and C-terminal helices. A subsequent major barrier corresponds to the organization of the hinge between the middle and N-terminal helices. Hyperstabilizing the hinge regions leads to twice the folding rate that is obtained from hyperstabilizing the helices, even though much fewer contacts are involved in hinge hyperstabilization than in helix hyperstabilization. Unfolding follows single-exponential kinetics, even at temperatures only slightly above the folding transition temperature.  相似文献   

4.
The colicin immunity protein Im7 folds from its unfolded state in 6 M urea to its native four-helix structure through an on-pathway intermediate that lacks one of the helices of the native structure (helix III). In order to further characterize the folding mechanism of Im7, we have studied the conformational properties of the protein unfolded in 6 M urea in detail using heteronuclear NMR. Triple-resonance experiments with 13C/15N-labelled Im7 in 6 M urea provided almost complete resonance assignments for the backbone nuclei, and measurement of backbone 15N relaxation parameters allowed dynamic ordering of the unfolded polypeptide chain to be investigated. Reduced spectral density mapping and fitting backbone R2 relaxation rates to a polymer dynamics model identified four clusters of interacting residues, each predicted by the average area buried upon folding for each residue. Chemical shift analyses and measurement of NOEs detected with a long mixing-time 1H-1H-15N NOESY-HSQC spectrum confirmed the formation of four clusters. Each cluster of interacting side-chains in urea-unfolded Im7 occurs in a region of the protein that forms a helix in the protein, with the largest clusters being associated with the three long helices that are formed in the on-pathway folding intermediate, whilst the smallest cluster forms a helix only in the native state. NMR studies of a Phe15Ala Im7 variant and a protein in which residues 51-56 are replaced by three glycine residues (H3G3 Im7*), indicated that the clusters do not interact with each other, possibly because they are solvated by urea, as indicated by analysis of NOEs between the protein and the solvent. Based on these data, we suggest that dilution of the chaotrope to initiate refolding will result in collapse of the clusters, leading to the formation of persistent helical structure and the generation of the three-helix folding intermediate.  相似文献   

5.
The folding of large, multidomain proteins involves the hierarchical assembly of individual domains. It remains unclear whether the stability and folding of small, single-domain proteins occurs through a comparable assembly of small, autonomous folding units. We have investigated the relationship between two subdomains of the protein T4 lysozyme. Thermodynamically, T4 lysozyme behaves as a cooperative unit and the unfolding transition fits a two-state model. The structure of the protein, however, resembles a dumbbell with two potential subdomains: an N-terminal subdomain (residues 13-75), and a C-terminal subdomain (residues 76-164 and 1-12). To investigate the effect of uncoupling these two subdomains within the context of the native protein, we created two circular permutations, both at the subdomain interface (residues 13 and 75). Both variants adopt an active wild-type T4 lysozyme fold. The protein starting with residue 13 is 3 kcal/mol less stable than wild type, whereas the protein beginning at residue 75 is 9 kcal/mol less stable, suggesting that the placement of the termini has a major effect on protein stability while minimally affecting the fold. When isolated as protein fragments, the C-terminal subdomain folds into a marginally stable helical structure, whereas the N-terminal subdomain is predominantly unfolded. ANS fluorescence studies indicate that, at low pH, the C-terminal subdomain adopts a loosely packed acid state. An acid state intermediate is also seen for all of the full-length variants. We propose that this acid state is comprised of an unfolded N-terminal subdomain and a loosely folded C-terminal subdomain.  相似文献   

6.
Zhou Z  Feng H  Zhou H  Zhou Y  Bai Y 《Biochemistry》2005,44(36):12107-12112
To test whether the folding process of a large protein can be understood on the basis of the folding behavior of the domains that constitute it, we coupled two well-studied small -helical proteins, the B-domain of protein A (60 amino acids) and Rd-apocytochrome b562 (Rd-apocyt b562, 106 amino acids), by fusing the C-terminal helix of the B-domain of protein A with the N-terminal helix of Rd-apocyt b562 without changing their hydrophobic core residues. The success of the design was confirmed by determining the structure of the engineered protein with multidimensional NMR methods. Kinetic studies showed that the logarithms of the folding/unfolding rate constants of the engineered protein are linearly dependent on concentrations of guanidinium chloride in the measurable range from 1.7 to 4 M. Their slopes (m-values) are close to those of Rd-apocyt b562. In addition, the 1H-15N HSQC spectrum taken at 1.5 M guanidinium chloride reveals that only the Rd-apocyt b562 domain in the designed protein remained folded. These results suggest that the two domains have weak energetic coupling. Interestingly, the redesigned protein folds faster than Rd-apocyt b562, suggesting that the fused helix stabilizes the rate-limiting transition state.  相似文献   

7.
The villin headpiece folds autonomously in vitro forming three alpha-helical regions. Local propensities, however, strongly disfavor the formation of the C-terminal helix because most native residue pairs in that helix are hydrophobic/polar mismatches. Even the N-terminal helix is unfavored according to the AGADIR criterion. Our coarse-grained ab initio simulations reveal three-body correlations in which hydrophobic residues position to protect amide-carbonyl hydrogen bonds from attack by water, thus inducing the growth of the C-terminal helix and guiding the folding process. Similar correlations are also found in all-atom simulations with an implicit solvent model that accurately reproduces the results of simulations with explicit solvent molecules. The correlations establish a large-scale, many-body context that may be probed experimentally by introducing mutations of certain nonobvious residues that reside outside the native hydrophobic core but that are predicted to affect the folding rates and dynamics dramatically.  相似文献   

8.
The diffusion-collision model (DCM) is applied to the folding kinetics of protein L and protein G. In the DCM, the two proteins are treated as consisting of two beta-hairpins and one alpha-helix, so that they are isomorphous with the three-helix bundle DCM model. In the absence of sequence dependent factors, both proteins would fold in the same way in the DCM, with the coalescence of the N-terminal hairpin and the helix slightly favored over the C-terminal hairpin and the helix because the former are closer together than the latter. However, sequence dependent factors make the N-terminal hairpin of protein L and the C-terminal hairpin of protein G more stable in the ensemble of unfolded conformations. This difference in the stabilities gives rise to the difference in the calculated folding behavior, in agreement with experiment.  相似文献   

9.
To examine how a short secondary structural element derived from a native protein folds when in a different protein environment, we inserted an 11-residue beta-sheet segment (cassette) from human immunoglobulin fold, Fab new, into an alpha-helical coiled-coil host protein (cassette holder). This de novo design protein model, the structural cassette mutagenesis (SCM) model, allows us to study protein folding principles involving both short- and long-range interactions that affect secondary structure stability and conformation. In this study, we address whether the insertion of this beta-sheet cassette into the alpha-helical coiled-coil protein would result in conformational change nucleated by the long-range tertiary stabilization of the coiled-coil, therefore overriding the local propensity of the cassette to form beta-sheet, observed in its native immunoglobulin fold. The results showed that not only did the nucleating helices of the coiled-coil on either end of the cassette fail to nucleate the beta-sheet cassette to fold with an alpha-helical conformation, but also the entire chimeric protein became a random coil. We identified two determinants in this cassette that prevented coiled-coil formation: (1) a tandem dipeptide NN motif at the N-terminal of the beta-sheet cassette, and (2) the hydrophilic Ser residue, which would be buried in the hydrophobic core if the coiled-coil structure were to fold. By amino acid substitution of these helix disruptive residues, that is, either the replacement of the NN motif with high helical propensity Ala residues or the substitution of Ser with Leu to enhance hydrophobicity, we were able to convert the random coil chimeric protein into a fully folded alpha-helical coiled-coil. We hypothesized that this NN motif is a "secondary structural specificity determinant" which is very selective for one type of secondary structure and may prevent neighboring residues from adopting an alternate protein fold. These sequences with secondary structural specificity determinants have very strong local propensity to fold into a specific secondary structure and may affect overall protein folding by acting as a folding initiation site.  相似文献   

10.
The B-domain of protein A has one of the simplest protein topologies, a three-helix bundle. Its folding has been studied as a model for elementary steps in the folding of larger proteins. Earlier studies suggested that folding might occur by way of a helical hairpin intermediate. Equilibrium hydrogen exchange measurements indicate that the C-terminal helical hairpin could be a potential folding intermediate. Kinetic refolding experiments were performed using stopped-flow circular dichroism and NMR hydrogen-deuterium exchange pulse labeling. Folding of the entire molecule is essentially complete within the 6 ms dead time of the quench-flow apparatus, indicating that the intermediate, if formed, progresses rapidly to the final folded state. Site-directed mutagenesis of the isoleucine residue at position 16 was used to generate a variant protein containing tryptophan (the 116 W mutant). The formation of the putative folding intermediate was expected to be favored in this mutant at the expense of the native folded form, due to predicted unfavorable steric interactions of the bulky tryptophan side chain in the folded state. The 116 W mutant refolds completely within the dead time of a stopped-flow fluorescence experiment. No partly folded intermediate could be detected by either kinetic or equilibrium measurements. Studies of peptide fragments suggest that the protein A sequence has an intrinsic propensity to form a helix II/helix III hairpin. However, its stability appears to be marginal (of the order of 1/2 kT) and it could not be an obligatory intermediate on a defined folding pathway. These results explicitly demonstrate that the protein A B domain folds extremely rapidly by an apparent two-state mechanism without formation of stable partly folded intermediates. Similar mechanisms may also be involved in the rapid folding of subdomains of larger proteins to form the compact molten globule intermediates that often accumulate during the folding process.  相似文献   

11.
It is widely believed that the dominant force opposing protein folding is the entropic cost of restricting internal rotations. The energetic changes from restricting side-chain torsional motion are more complex than simply a loss of conformational entropy, however. A second force opposing protein folding arises when a side-chain in the folded state is not in its lowest-energy rotamer, giving rotameric strain. chi strain energy results from a dihedral angle being shifted from the most stable conformation of a rotamer when a protein folds. We calculated the energy of a side-chain as a function of its dihedral angles in a poly(Ala) helix. Using these energy profiles, we quantify conformational entropy, rotameric strain energy and chi strain energy for all 17 amino acid residues with side-chains in alpha-helices. We can calculate these terms for any amino acid in a helix interior in a protein, as a function of its side-chain dihedral angles, and have implemented this algorithm on a web page. The mean change in rotameric strain energy on folding is 0.42 kcal mol-1 per residue and the mean chi strain energy is 0.64 kcal mol-1 per residue. Loss of conformational entropy opposes folding by a mean of 1.1 kcal mol-1 per residue, and the mean total force opposing restricting a side-chain into a helix is 2.2 kcal mol-1. Conformational entropy estimates alone therefore greatly underestimate the forces opposing protein folding. The introduction of strain when a protein folds should not be neglected when attempting to quantify the balance of forces affecting protein stability. Consideration of rotameric strain energy may help the use of rotamer libraries in protein design and rationalise the effects of mutations where side-chain conformations change.  相似文献   

12.
Li Y  Gupta R  Cho JH  Raleigh DP 《Biochemistry》2007,46(4):1013-1021
The C-terminal domain of ribosomal protein L9 (CTL9) is a 92-residue alpha-beta protein which contains an unusual three-stranded mixed parallel and antiparallel beta-sheet. The protein folds in a two-state fashion, and the folding rate is slow. It is thought that the slow folding may be caused by the necessity of forming this unusual beta-sheet architecture in the transition state for folding. This hypothesis makes CTL9 an interesting target for folding studies. The transition state for the folding of CTL9 was characterized by phi-value analysis. The folding of a set of hydrophobic core mutants was analyzed together with a set of truncation mutants. The results revealed a few positions with high phi-values (> or = 0.5), notably, V131, L133, H134, V137, and L141. All of these residues were found in the beta-hairpin region, indicating that the formation of this structure is likely to be the rate-limiting step in the folding of CTL9. One face of the beta-hairpin docks against the N-terminal helix. Analysis of truncation mutants of this helix confirmed its importance in folding. Mutations at other sites in the protein gave small phi-values, despite the fact that some of them had major effects on stability. The analysis indicates that formation of the antiparallel hairpin is critical and its interactions with the first helix are also important. Thus, the slow folding is not a consequence of the need to fully form the unusual three-stranded beta-sheet in the transition state. Analysis of the urea dependence of the folding rates indicates that mutations modulate the unfolded state. The folding of CTL9 is broadly consistent with the nucleation-condensation model of protein folding.  相似文献   

13.
The capsid protein of Semliki Forest virus constitutes the N-terminal part of a large viral polyprotein. It consists of an unstructured basic segment (residues 1-118) and a 149 residue serine protease module (SFVP, residues 119-267) comprised of two beta-barrel domains. Previous in vivo and in vitro translation experiments have demonstrated that SFVP folds co-translationally during synthesis of the viral polyprotein and rapidly cleaves itself off the nascent chain. To test whether fast co-translation folding of SFVP is an intrinsic property of the polypeptide chain or whether folding is accelerated by cellular components, we investigated spontaneous folding of recombinant SFVP in vitro. The results show that the majority of unfolded SFVP molecules fold faster than any previously studied two-domain protein (tau=50 ms), and that folding of the N-terminal domain precedes structure formation of the C-terminal domain. This shows that co-translational folding of SFVP does not require additional cellular components and suggests that rapid folding is the result of molecular evolution towards efficient virus biogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
Previous work shows that the transiently populated, on-pathway intermediate in Im7 folding contains three of the four native alpha-helices docked around a core stabilised by native and non-native interactions. To determine the structure and dynamic properties of this species in more detail, we have used protein engineering to trap the intermediate at equilibrium and analysed the resulting proteins using NMR spectroscopy and small angle X-ray scattering. Four variants were created. In L53AI54A, two hydrophobic residues within helix III are truncated, preventing helix III from docking stably onto the developing hydrophobic core. In two other variants, the six residues encompassing the native helix III were replaced with three (H3G3) or six (H3G6) glycine residues. In the fourth variant, YY, two native tyrosine residues (Tyr55 and Tyr56) were re-introduced into H3G6 to examine their role in determining the properties of the intermediate ensemble. All four variants show variable peak intensities and broad peak widths, consistent with these proteins being conformationally dynamic. Chemical shift analyses demonstrated that L53AI54A and YY contain native-like secondary structure in helices I and IV, while helix II is partly formed and helix III is absent. Lack of NOEs and rapid NH exchange for L53AI54A, combined with detailed analysis of the backbone dynamics, indicated that the hydrophobic core of this variant is not uniquely structured, but fluctuates on the NMR timescale. The results demonstrate that though much of the native-like secondary structure of Im7 is present in the variants, their hydrophobic cores remain relatively fluid. The comparison of H3G3/H3G6 and L53AI54A/YY suggests that Tyr55 and/or Tyr56 interact with the three-helix core, leading other residues in this region of the protein to dock with the core as folding progresses. In this respect, the three-helix bundle acts as a template for formation of helix III and the creation of the native fold.  相似文献   

15.
The four-helical protein Im7 folds via a rapidly formed on-pathway intermediate (k(UI)=3000 s(-1) at pH 7.0, 10 degrees C) that contains three (helices I, II and IV) of the four native alpha-helices. The relatively slow (k(IN)=300 s(-1)) conversion of this intermediate into the native structure is driven by the folding and docking of the six residue helix III onto the developing hydrophobic core. Here, we describe the structural properties of four Im7* variants designed to trap the protein in the intermediate state by disrupting the stabilising interactions formed between helix III and the rest of the protein structure. In two of these variants (I54A and L53AI54A), hydrophobic residues within helix III have been mutated to alanine, whilst in the other two mutants the sequence encompassing the native helix III was replaced by a glycine linker, three (H3G3) or six (H3G6) residues in length. All four variants were shown to be monomeric, as judged by analytical ultracentrifugation, and highly helical as measured by far-UV CD. In addition, all the variants denature co-operatively and have a stability (DeltaG(UF)) and buried hydrophobic surface area (M(UF)) similar to those of the on-pathway kinetic intermediate. Structural characterisation of these variants using 1-anilino-8-napthalene sulphonic acid (ANS) binding, near-UV CD and 1D (1)H NMR demonstrate further that the trapped intermediate ensemble is highly structured with little exposed hydrophobic surface area. Interestingly, however, the structural properties of the variants I54A and L53AI54A differ in detail from those of H3G3 and H3G6. In particular, the single tryptophan residue, located near the end of helix IV, and distant from helix III, is in a distinct environment in the two sets of mutants as judged by fluorescence, near-UV CD and the sensitivity of tryptophan fluorescence to iodide quenching. Overall, the results confirm previous kinetic analysis that demonstrated the hierarchical folding of Im7 via an on-pathway intermediate, and show that this species is a highly helical ensemble with a well-formed hydrophobic core. By contrast with the native state, however, the intermediate ensemble is flexible enough to change in response to mutation, its structural properties being tailored by residues in the sequence encompassing the native helix III.  相似文献   

16.
Most protein domains are found in multi-domain proteins, yet most studies of protein folding have concentrated on small, single-domain proteins or on isolated domains from larger proteins. Spectrin domains are small (106 amino acid residues), independently folding domains consisting of three long alpha-helices. They are found in multi-domain proteins with a number of spectrin domains in tandem array. Structural studies have shown that in these arrays the last helix of one domain forms a continuous helix with the first helix of the following domain. It has been demonstrated that a number of spectrin domains are stabilised by their neighbours. Here we investigate the molecular basis for cooperativity between adjacent spectrin domains 16 and 17 from chicken brain alpha-spectrin (R16 and R17). We show that whereas the proteins unfold as a single cooperative unit at 25 degrees C, cooperativity is lost at higher temperatures and in the presence of stabilising salts. Mutations in the linker region also cause the cooperativity to be lost. However, the cooperativity does not rely on specific interactions in the linker region alone. Most mutations in the R17 domain cause a decrease in cooperativity, whereas proteins with mutations in the R16 domain still fold cooperatively. We propose a mechanism for this behaviour.  相似文献   

17.
In T4 lysozyme, helix A is located at the amino terminus of the sequence but is associated with the C-terminal domain in the folded structure. To investigate the implications of this arrangement for the folding of the protein, we first created a circularly permuted variant with a new amino terminus at residue 12. In effect, this moves the sequence corresponding to helix A from the N- to the C-terminus of the molecule. The protein crystallized nonisomorphously with the wild type but has a very similar structure, showing that the unit consisting of helix A and the C-terminal domain can be reconstituted from a contiguous polypeptide chain. The protein is less stable than the wild type but folds slightly faster. We then produced a second variant in which the helix A sequence was appended at the C-terminus (as in the first variant), but was also restored at the N-terminus (as in the wild type). This variant has two helix A sequences, one at the N-terminus and the other at the C-terminus, each of which can compete for the same site in the folded protein. The crystal structure shows that it is the N-terminal sequence that folds in a manner similar to that of the wild type, whereas the copy at the C-terminus is forced to loop out. The stability of this protein is much closer to that of the wild type, but its rate of folding is significantly slower. The reduction in rate is attributed to the presence of the two identical sequence segments which compete for a single, mutually exclusive, site.  相似文献   

18.
Nucleic acid recognition is often mediated by α‐helices or disordered regions that fold into α‐helix on binding. A peptide bearing the DNA recognition helix of HPV16 E2 displays type II polyproline (PII) structure as judged by pH, temperature, and solvent effects on the CD spectra. NMR experiments indicate that the canonical α‐helix is stabilized at the N‐terminus, while the PII forms at the C‐terminus half of the peptide. Re‐examination of the dihedral angles of the DNA binding helix in the crystal structure and analysis of the NMR chemical shift indexes confirm that the N‐terminus half is a canonical α‐helix, while the C‐terminal half adopts a 310 helix structure. These regions precisely match two locally driven folding nucleii, which partake in the native hydrophobic core and modulate a conformational switch in the DNA binding helix. The peptide shows only weak and unspecific residual DNA binding, 104‐fold lower affinity, and 500‐fold lower discrimination capacity compared with the domain. Thus, the precise side chain conformation required for modulated and tight physiological binding by HPV E2 is largely determined by the noncanonical strained α‐helix conformation, “presented” by this unique architecture. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 91: 432–443, 2009. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

19.
Brewer SH  Song B  Raleigh DP  Dyer RB 《Biochemistry》2007,46(11):3279-3285
A major difficulty in experimental studies of protein folding is the lack of nonperturbing, residue specific probes of folding. Here, we demonstrate the ability to resolve protein folding dynamics at the level of a single residue using 13C=18O isotope-edited infrared spectroscopy. A single 13C=18O isotopic label was incorporated into the backbone of the 36 residue, three-helix bundle villin headpiece subdomain (HP36). The label was placed in a solvent protected region of the second alpha-helix of the protein. The 13C=18O isotopic label shifted the carbonyl stretching frequency to 1572.1 cm-1 in the folded state, well removed from the 12C=16O band of the unlabeled protein backbone. The unique IR signature of the 13C=18O label was exploited to probe the equilibrium thermal unfolding transition using temperature-dependent FTIR spectroscopy. The folding/unfolding dynamics were monitored using temperature-jump (T-jump) IR spectroscopy. The equilibrium unfolding studies showed conformational changes suggestive of a loss of helical structure in helix 2 prior to the global unfolding of the protein. T-jump relaxation kinetics probing both the labeled site and the 12C=16O band were found to be biphasic with similar relaxation rates. The slow relaxation phase (approximately 2 x 10(5) s-1) corresponds to the global folding transition. The location of the label, a buried position in helix 2, provides an important probe of the origin of the fast relaxation phase (approximately 10(7) s-1). This phase has significant amplitude for the labeled position even though it is well protected from solvent in the folded structure. The fast phase likely represents a rapid pre-equilibrium that involves solvent penetration around the label and possible partial unfolding of helix 2 prior to the global unfolding transition. This work represents the first experimental study of ultrafast folding dynamics with residue specific resolution.  相似文献   

20.
Native-like complexes of proteins, formed by the association of two complementary fragments comprising the entire sequence of the protein, can be used to gain insight into the stability and folding of the intact protein. We have studied the structural, thermodynamic and kinetic properties of four barnase complexes, with the cleavage site at different positions of the amino-acid chain (CB36, at position 36; CB56, at position 56; CB68, at position 68; and CB79, at position 79). The four barnase complexes have native-like structure as shown by fluorescence, far-and near-UV CD, size-exclusion chromatography and NMR. The NMR characterization indicated that the structural changes were mainly located in regions close to the cleavage site. The main core of the protein was fully formed and the overall structure was similar to that of intact barnase. The thermal and chemical denaturation showed that all complexes were substantially destabilized. CB56 displayed two denaturation transitions, probably because of the presence of partially folded conformations around the cleavage site. The rate constant for the association/folding of fragments decreased with the decreasing length of the C-terminal fragment. Thus, the larger the fragment (and, consequently, the larger the amount of residual native-like structure), the faster the association. These findings are consistent with the proposed model of barnase folding.  相似文献   

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