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1.
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   

2.
1H NMR spectroscopy at 100 MHz was used to determine the first-order rate constants for the 1H-2H exchange of the H-2 histidine resonances of RNase-A in 2H2O at 35 degrees C and pH meter readings of 7, 9, 10 and 10.5. Prolonged exposure in 2H2O at 35 degrees C and pH meter reading 11 caused irreversible denaturation of RN-ase-A. The rate constants at pH 7 and 9 agreed reasonably well with those obtained in 1H-3H exchange experiments by Ohe, J., Matsuo, H., Sakiyama, F. and Narita, K. [J. Biochem, (Tokyo) 75, 1197-1200 (1974)]. The rate data obtained by various authors is summarised and the reasons for the poor agreement between the data is discussed. The first-order rate constant for the exchange of His-48 increases rapidly from near zero at pH 9 (due to its inaccessibility to solvent) with increase of pH to 10.5 The corresponding values for His-119 show a decrease and those for His-12 a small increase over the same pH range. These changes are attributed to a conformational change in the hinge region of RNase-A (probably due to the titration of Tyr-25) which allows His-48 to become accessible to solvent. 1H NMR spectra of S-protein and S-peptide, and of material partially deuterated at the C-2 positions of the histidine residues confirm the reassignment of the histidine resonances of RNase-A [Bradbury, J. H. & Teh, J. S. (1975) Chem. Commun., 936-937]. The chemical shifts of the C-2 and C-4 protons of histidine-12 of S-peptide are followed as a function of pH and a pK' value of 6.75 is obtained. The reassignment of the three C-2 histidine resonances of S-protein is confirmed by partial deuteration studies. The pK' values obtained from titration of the H-2 resonances of His-48, His-105 and His-119 are 5.3, 6.5 and 6.0, respectively. The S-protein is less stable to acid than RNase-A since the former, but not the latter, shows evidence of reversible denaturation at pH 3 and 26 degrees C. His-48 in S-protein titrates normally and has a lower pK than in RN-ase-A probably because of the absence of Asp-14, which in RN-ase-A forms a a hydrogen bond with His-48 and causes it to be inaccessible to solvent, at pH values below 9.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Low-energy conformations of the S-peptide fragment (20 amino acid residues long) of ribonuclease A were studied by Monte Carlo simulated annealing. The obtained lowest-energy structures have alpha-helices with different size and location, depending distinctively on the ionizing states of acidic amino acid residues. The simulation started from completely random initial conformation and was performed without any bias toward a particular structure. The most conspicuous alpha-helices arose from the simulation when both Glu 9 and Asp 14 were assumed to be electrically neutral, whereas the resulting conformations became much less helical when Asp 14 rather than Glu 9 was allowed to have a negative charge. Together with experimental evidence that the alpha-helix in the S-peptide is most stable at pH 3.8, we consider the helix formation need the carboxyl group of Asp 14 to be electrically neutral in this weakly acidic condition. In contrast, a negative charge at Asp 14 appears to function in support of a view that this residue is crucial to helix termination owing to its possibility to form a salt bridge with His 12. These results indicate that the conformation of the S-peptide depends considerably on the ionizing state of Asp 14.  相似文献   

5.
6.
One of the four titrating histidine ring C-2 proton resonances of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease has been assigned to histidine residue 12. This was accomplished by a direct comparison of the rate of tritium incorporation into position C-2 of histidine 12 of S-peptide (residues 1 to 20) derived from ribonuclease S, with the rates of deuterium exchange of the four histidine C-2 proton resonances of ribonuclease S under the same experimental conditions. The same assignment was obtained by a comparison of the NMR titration curves of ribonuclease S, the noncovalent complex of S-peptide and S-protein (residues 21 to 124) with the results for the recombined complex in which position C-2 of histidine 12 was fully deuterated. The second active site histidine resonance was assigned to histidine residue 119 by consideration of the NMR titration results fro carboxymethylated histidines and 1-carboxymethylhistidine 119 ribonuclease. This assignment is a reversal of that originally reported, and has important implications for the interpretation of NMR titration data of ribonuclease.  相似文献   

7.
The temperature (-7 degrees C to 45 degrees C, pH 5.4) and pH (0 degrees C) dependence of 1H chemical shifts of ribonuclease S-peptide (5 mM, 1 M NaCl) has been measured at 360 MHz. The observed variations evidence the formation of a partial helical structure, involving the fragment Thr-3-Met-13. Two salt-bridges stabilize the helix: those formed by Glu-9- ...His-12+ and Glu-2- ...Arg-10+. The structural features deduced from the 1H-NMR at low temperature for the isolated S-peptide are compatible with the structure shown by the same molecule in the ribonuclease S crystal.  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. We have substituted the wild-type residue Met-13 with six other hydrophobic residues ranging in size from alanine to phenylalanine and have determined the thermodynamic parameters associated with binding of these analogues to S-protein by titration calorimetry in the temperature range 5-25 degrees C. The heat capacity change (delta Cp) associated with binding was obtained from a global analysis of the temperature dependences of the free energies and enthalpies of binding. The delta Cp's were not correlated in any simple fashion with the nonpolar surface area (delta Anp) buried upon binding.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The structure of ribonuclease at 2.5 Ångström resolution   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The tertiary structure of ribonuclease-A crystallized from 40% aqueous ethanol has been determined by X-ray crystallography, using the method of isomorphous replacement with four heavy-metal derivatives. The unit cell of the crystal, with a = 30.31 A?, b = 38.26 A?, c = 52.91 A? and β = 105 °55′, contains two molecules and is similar to the form studied in detail by Harker, Kartha &; Bello at Buffalo, N.Y.The tertiary structures of the ribonucleases studied at the different centres are similar with regard to the α-carbon atom positions but the comparison cannot be extended further as no details of the Buffalo structure have been published.A preliminary comparison is made between the tertiary structures of RNase-A and that of RNase-S, whose atomic co-ordinates have been published. In both cases, the three amino acid residues, His-12, His-119 and Lys-41, responsible for activity have approximately the same relative positions with respect to one another, but there are some interesting differences between the two, which are pointed out in the text.  相似文献   

11.
The crystal structure of RNase Rh, a new class of microbial ribonuclease from Rhizopus niveus, has been determined at 2.5 A resolution by the multiple isomorphous replacement method. The crystal structure was refined by simulated annealing with molecular dynamics. The current crystallographic R-factor is 0.200 in the 10-2.5 A resolution range. The molecular structure which is completely different from the known structures of RNase A and RNase T1 consists of six alpha-helices and seven beta-strands, belonging to the alpha+beta type structure. Two histidine and one glutamic acid residues which were predicted as the most probably functional residues by chemical modification studies are found to be clustered. The steric nature of the active site taken together with the relevant site-directed mutagenesis experiments (Irie et al.) indicates that: (i) the two histidine residues are the general acid and base; and (ii) an aspartic acid residue plays a role of recognizing adenine moiety of the substrate.  相似文献   

12.
We have identified a pentapeptide region of microinjected ribonuclease A that is required for enhanced degradation of this protein during serum withdrawal. We introduced reductively methylated [3H]ribonuclease A, [3H]ribonuclease S-protein (residues 21-124), and [3H]ribonuclease S-peptide (residues 1-20) into the cytosol of human fibroblasts by red cell-mediated microinjection and osmotic lysis of pinosomes. The degradative rates of ribonuclease A and ribonuclease S-peptide are increased 2-fold upon withdrawal of serum, while catabolism of ribonuclease S-protein is not regulated in this manner. Certain fragments of ribonuclease S-peptide are also degraded in a serum-dependent fashion (residues 1-14 and 4-13), while other fragments are not (residues 1-10 and 2-8). [3H]Ribonuclease S-peptide is cleaved into two smaller radioactive peptides during loading into red cell ghosts. We tentatively identified the larger fragment as residues 7-11 based on its molecular weight determined by Sephadex chromatography in the presence of 8 M urea combined with sequential Edman degradation to identify the position of radioactive lysines. The smaller peptide fragment appears to be the amino-terminal dipeptide, Lys-Glu, and/or residues 7-8, Lys-Phe. After microinjection into fibroblasts, the pentapeptide is degraded at an enhanced rate in the absence of serum, while degradation of the dipeptide is not affected. We confirmed that residues 7-11 constitute the larger hydrolysis product of S-peptide by synthesizing this pentapeptide and radiolabeling it by reductive methylation. It migrated at the expected position after Sephadex chromatography in 8 M urea and was further hydrolyzed only slightly during loading into red cells. Finally, degradation of this pentapeptide after injection into fibroblasts was enhanced 2-fold upon serum withdrawal. These results, combined with our other recent studies (McElligott, M. A., Miao, P., and Dice, J. F. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11986-11993), suggest that the pentapeptide, Lys-Phe-Glu-Arg-Gln, targets microinjected ribonuclease A to lysosomes for enhanced degradation during serum deprivation.  相似文献   

13.
The refolding kinetics of ribonuclease S have been measured by tyrosine absorbance, by tyrosine fluorescence emission, and by rapid binding of the specific inhibitor 2′CMP 2 to folded RNAase S. The S-protein is first unfolded at pH 1.7 and then either mixed with S-peptide as refolding is initiated by a stopped-flow pH jump to pH 6.8, or the same results are obtained if S-protein and S-peptide are present together before refolding is initiated. The refolding kinetics of RNAase S have been measured as a function of temperature (10 to 40 °C) and of protein concentration (10 to 120 μm). The results are compared to the folding kinetics of S-protein alone and to earlier studies of RNAase A. A thermal folding transition of S-protein has been found below 30 °C at pH 1.7; its effects on the refolding kinetics are described in the following paper (Labhardt &; Baldwin, 1979).In this paper we characterize the refolding kinetics of unfolded S-protein, as it is found above 30 °C at pH 1.7, together with the kinetics of combination between S-peptide and S-protein during folding at pH 6.8. Two classes of unfolded S-protein molecules are found, fast-folding and slow-folding molecules, in a 20: 80 ratio. This is the same result as that found earlier for RNAase A; it is expected if the slow-folding molecules are produced by the slow cis-trans isomerization of proline residues after unfolding, since S-protein contains all four proline residues of RNAase A.The refolding kinetics of the fast-folding molecules show clearly that combination between S-peptide and S-protein occurs before folding of S-protein is complete. If combination occurred only after complete folding, then the kinetics of formation of RNAase S should be rather slow (5 s and 100 s at 30 °C) and nearly independent of protein concentration, as shown by separate measurements of the folding kinetics of S-protein, and of the combination between S-peptide and folded S-protein. The observed folding kinetics are faster than predicted by this model and also the folding rate increases strongly with protein concentration (apparent 1.6 order kinetics). The fact that RNAase S is formed more rapidly than S-protein alone is sufficient by itself to show that combination with S-peptide precedes complete folding of S-protein. Computer simulation of a simple, parallel-pathway scheme is able to reproduce the folding kinetics of the fast-folding molecules. All three probes give the same folding kinetics.These results exclude the model for protein folding in which the rate-limiting step is an initial diffusion of the polypeptide chain into a restricted range of three-dimensional configurations (“nueleation”) followed by rapid folding (“propagation”). If this model were valid, one would expect comparable rates of folding for RNAase A and for S-protein and one would also expect to find no populated folding intermediates, so that combination between S-peptide and S-protein should occur after folding is complete. Instead, RNAase A folds 60 times more rapidly than S-protein and also combination with S-peptide occurs before folding of S-protein is complete. The results demonstrate that the folding rate of S-protein increases after the formation, or stabilization, of an intermediate which results from combination with S-peptide. They support a sequential model for protein folding in which the rates of successive steps in folding depend on the stabilities of preceding intermediates.The refolding kinetics of the slow-folding molecules are complex. Two results demonstrate the presence of folding intermediates: (1) the three probes show different kinetic progress curves, and (2) the folding kinetics are concentration-dependent, in contrast to the results expected if complete folding of S-protein precedes combination with S-peptide. A faster phase of the slow-refolding reaction is detected both by tyrosine absorbance and fluorescence emission but not by 2′CMP binding, indicating that native RNAase S is not formed in this phase. Comparison of the kinetic progress curves measured by different probes is made with the use of the kinetic ratio test, which is defined here.  相似文献   

14.
Ribonuclease S-peptide as a carrier in fusion proteins.   总被引:16,自引:1,他引:15       下载免费PDF全文
S-peptide (residues 1-20) and S-protein (residues 21-124) are the enzymatically inactive products of the limited digestion of ribonuclease A by subtilisin. S-peptide binds S-protein with high affinity to form ribonuclease S, which has full enzymatic activity. Recombinant DNA technology was used to produce a fusion protein having three parts: carrier, spacer, and target. The two carriers used were the first 15 residues of S-peptide (S15) and a mutant S15 in which Asp 14 had been changed to Asn (D14N S15). The spacer consisted of three proline residues and a four-residue sequence recognized by factor Xa protease. The target was beta-galactosidase. The interaction between the S-peptide portion of the fusion protein and immobilized S-protein allowed for affinity purification of the fusion protein under denaturing (S15 as carrier) or nondenaturing (D14N S15 as carrier) conditions. A sensitive method was developed to detect the fusion protein after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis by its ribonuclease activity following activation with S-protein. S-peptide has distinct advantages over existing carriers in fusion proteins in that it combines a small size (> or = 15 residues), a tunable affinity for ligand (Kd > or = 10(-9) M), and a high sensitivity of detection (> or = 10(-16) mol in a gel).  相似文献   

15.
Pancreatic ribonuclease A may be cleaved to produce two fragments: the S-peptide (residues 1-20) and the S-protein (residues 21-124). The S-peptide, or a truncated version designated as the S15 peptide (residues 1-15), combines with the S-protein to produce catalytically active complexes. The conformation of these peptides and many of their analogues is predominantly random coil at room temperature; however, they populate a significant fraction of helical form at low temperature under certain solution conditions. Moreover, they adopt a helical conformation when bound to the S-protein. A hybrid sequence, disulfide-stabilized peptide (ApaS-25), designed to stabilize the helical structure of the S-peptide in solution, also combines with the S-protein to yield a catalytically active complex. We have performed high-precision titration microcalorimetric measurements to determine the free energy, enthalpy, entropy, and heat capacity changes for the binding of ApaS-25 to S-protein within the temperature range 5-25 degrees C. The thermodynamic parameters for both the complex formation reactions and the helix-to-coil transition also were calculated, using a structure-based approach, by calculating changes in accessible surface area and using published empirical parameters. A simple thermodynamic model is presented in an attempt to account for the differences between the binding of ApaS-25 and the S-peptide. From this model, the thermodynamic parameters of the helix-to-coil transition of S15 can be calculated.  相似文献   

16.
17.
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   

18.
At pH 1.7 S-peptide dissociates from S-protein but S-protein remains partly folded below 30 °C. A folded form of S-protein, labeled I3, is detected and measured by its ability to combine rapidly with S-peptide at pH 6.8 and then to form native ribonuclease S. The second-order combination reaction (k = 0.7 × 106m?1s?1 at 20 °C) can be monitored either by tyrosine absorbance or fluorescence emission; the subsequent first-order folding reaction (half-time, 68 ms; 20 °C) is monitored by 2′CMP 2 binding. Combination with S-peptide and folding to form native RNAase S is considerably slower for both classes of unfolded S-protein (see preceding paper).I3 shows a thermal folding transition at pH 1.7: it is completely unfolded above 32 °C and reaches a limiting low-temperature value of 65% below 10 °C. The 35% S-protein remaining at 10 °C is unfolded as judged by its refolding behavior in forming native RNAase S at pH 6.8. The folding transition of S-protein at pH 1.7 is a broad, multi-state transition. This is shown both by the large fraction of unfolded S-protein remaining at low temperatures and by the large differences between the folding transition curves monitored by I3 and by tyrosine absorbance.The fact that S-protein remains partly folded after dissociation of S-peptide at pH 1.7 but not at pH 6.8 may be explained by two earlier observations. (1) Native RNAase A is stable in the temperature range of the S-protein folding transition at pH 1.7, and (2) the binding constant of S-protein for S-peptide falls steadily as the pH is lowered, by more than four orders of magnitude between pH 8.3 and pH 2.7, at 0 °C. The following explanation is suggested for why folding intermediates are observed easily in the transition of S-protein but not of RNAase A. The S-protein transition is shifted to lower temperatures, where folding intermediates should be more stable: consequently, intermediates in the folding of RNAase A which do not involve the S-peptide moiety and which are populated to almost detectable levels can be observed at the lower temperatures of the S-protein transition.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Ribonuclease inhibitor (RI) is a protein that forms a very tight complex with ribonucleases (RNases) of the pancreatic type. RI contains 30 thiol groups, some of which are important for the enzyme-inhibitor interaction. To examine which thiols are affected by the binding of RNase, differential labeling experiments were performed. Reaction of porcine RI with the cysteine-specific labeling reagent 4-N,N-dimethylaminoazobenzene-4'-iodoacetamido-2'-sulfonic acid resulted in labeling of an average of 7.4 of the 30 cysteinyl residues. Binding of bovine pancreatic RNase A caused a 3.2-fold reduction in the extent of modification. Peptide mapping showed that in free RI, Cys-57, -371, and -404 were labeled to the greatest extent (yield, 0.4-0.6 mol/mol). RNase A did not protect Cys-57 against modification, whereas the labeling of Cys-371 and -404 was reduced by more than 90%. A second group of residues was labeled to a lesser extent in free RI (yield, 0.04-0.2 mol/mol). Within this group 11 residues were protected by RNase A by more than 90%, 2 were not affected at all, and 7 were protected between 10 and 90%. Seven cysteinyl residues in RI that were protected in the RI.RNase A complex were no longer protected in the RI.S-protein complex. These residues were mainly present in the N-terminal region of RI. However, when the S-peptide was included to yield the RI.RNase S complex, the same pattern of labeling was obtained as with the RI.RNase A complex. Addition of the S-peptide alone had no effect on the labeling. The implications of these observations with respect to RNase binding areas of RI are discussed in relation to the results obtained from the analysis of active RI molecules that contain deletions.  相似文献   

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