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 234 毫秒
1.
δ-Crystallin is the major structural protein in avian eye lenses and is homologous to the urea cycle enzyme argininosuccinate lyase. This protein is structurally assembled as double dimers. Lys-315 is the only residue which is arranged symmetrically at the diagonal subunit interfaces to interact with each other. This study found that wild-type protein had both dimers and monomers present in 2–4 M urea whilst only monomers of the K315A mutant were observed under the same conditions, as judged by sedimentation velocity analysis. The assembly of monomeric K315A mutant was reversible in contrast to wild-type protein. Molecular dynamics simulations showed that the dissociation of primary dimers is prior to the diagonal dimers in wild-type protein. These results suggest the critical role of Lys-315 in stabilization of the diagonal dimer structure. Guanidinium hydrochloride (GdmCl) denatured wild-type or K315A mutant protein did not fold into functional protein. However, the urea dissociated monomers of K315A mutant protein in GdmCl were reversible folding through a multiple steps mechanism as measured by tryptophan and ANS fluorescence. Two partly unfolded intermediates were detected in the pathway. Refolding of the intermediates resulted in a conformation with greater amounts of hydrophobic regions exposed which was prone to the formation of protein aggregates. The formation of aggregates was not prevented by the addition of α-crystallin. These results highlight that the conformational status of the monomers is critical for determining whether reversible oligomerization or aggregate formation occurs.  相似文献   

2.
Unfolding and refolding of heterooctameric phosphofructokinase-1 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae were investigated by application of kinetic, hydrodynamic, and spectroscopic methods and by use of guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) as denaturant. Inactivation of the enzyme starts at about 0.3 M GdmCl and undergoes a sharp unfolding transition in a narrow range of the denaturant concentration. The inactivation is accompanied by a dissociation of the enzyme into dimers (at 0.6 M GdmCl), which could be detected by changes of the circular dichroism and intrinsic fluorescence. Protein aggregates were observed from 0.7 to 1.5 M GdmCl that unfold at higher denaturant concentrations. Refolding of chemically denatured phosphofructokinase proceeds as a stepwise process via the generation of elements of secondary structure, the formation of assembly-competent monomers that associate to heterodimers and the assembly of dimers to heterotetramers and heterooctamers. The assembly reactions seem to be rate-limiting. Recovery of the enzyme activity (maximum 65%) competes with an nonproductive aggregation of the subunits. alpha-Cyclodextrin functions as an artificial chaperone by preventing aggregation of the subunits, whereas ATP is suggested to support the generation of heterodimers that are competent to a further assembly.  相似文献   

3.
The unfolding and dissociation of the tetrameric enzyme fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase from pig kidney by guanidine hydrochloride have been investigated at equilibrium by monitoring enzyme activity, ANS binding, intrinsic (tyrosine) protein fluorescence, exposure of thiol groups, fluorescence of extrinsic probes (AEDANS, MIANS), and size-exclusion chromatography. The unfolding is a multistate process involving as the first intermediate a catalytically inactive tetramer. The evidence that indicates the existence of this intermediate is as follows: (1) the loss of enzymatic activity and the concomitant increase of ANS binding, at low concentrations of Gdn.HCl (midpoint at 0.75 M), are both protein concentration independent, and (2) the enzyme remains in a tetrameric state at 0.9 M Gdn.HCl as shown by size-exclusion chromatography. At slightly higher Gdn.HCl concentrations the inactive tetramer dissociates to a compact dimer which is prone to aggregate. Further evidence for dissociation of tetramers to dimers and of dimers to monomers comes from the concentration dependence of AEDANS-labeled enzyme anisotropy data. Above 2.3 M Gdn.HCl the change of AEDANS anisotropy is concentration independent, indicative of monomer unfolding, which also is detected by a red shift of MIANS-labeled enzyme emission. At Gdn.HCl concentrations higher than 3.0 M, the protein elutes from the size-exclusion column as a single peak, with a retention volume smaller than that of the native protein, corresponding to the completely unfolded monomer. In the presence of its cofactor Mg(2+), the denaturated enzyme could be successfully reconstituted into the active enzyme with a yield of approximately 70-90%. Refolding kinetic data indicate that rapid refolding and reassociation of the monomers into a nativelike tetramer and reactivation of the tetramer are sequential events, the latter involving slow and small conformational rearrangements in the refolded enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Catalases, although synthesized from single genes and built up from only one type of subunit, exist in heterogeneous form with respect to their conformations and association states in biological systems. This heterogeneity is not of genetic origin, but rather reflects the instability of this oligomeric heme enzyme. To understand better the factors that stabilize the various association states of catalase, we performed studies on the multimeric intermediates that are stabilized during guanidine-hydrochloride- and urea-induced unfolding of bovine liver catalase (BLC). For the first time, we have observed an enzymatically active, folded dimer of native BLC. This dimer has slightly higher enzymatic activity and altered structural properties compared to the native tetramer. Comparative studies of the effect of NaCl, GdmCl, and urea on BLC show that cation binding to negatively charged groups present in amino acid side chains of the enzyme leads to stabilization of an enzymatically active, folded dimer of BLC. Besides the folded dimer, an enzymatically active expanded tetramer and a partially unfolded, enzymatically inactive dimer of BLC were also observed. A complete recovery of native enzyme was observed on refolding of expanded tetramers and folded dimers; however, a very low recovery (maximum of approximately 5%) of native enzyme was observed on refolding of partially unfolded dimers and fully unfolded monomers.  相似文献   

5.
The balance between stabilizing forces and the localized electrostatic repulsions destabilizing the transthyretin (TTR) tetramer is tunable via anion shielding. The two symmetrical anion interaction sites in TTR are comprised of residues Lys15 and Lys15' from opposing subunits on the periphery of the two thyroxine binding sites. These epsilon-ammonium groups repel one another and destabilize the tetramer, unless an appropriate anion is present, which stabilizes the tetramer. Chaotrope denaturation of TTR exhibits unusual behavior in that urea appears to be a stronger denaturant than GdmCl (guanidinium chloride), even though GdmCl is typically twice as powerful as a denaturant. The shift in the midpoint of the urea denaturation curve to higher concentrations as well as the increase in the mole fraction of tetramer that is highly resistant to denaturation with increasing KCl concentration provides strong evidence that anion shielding stabilizes the TTR tetramer. A consequence of tetramer stabilization is folding hysteresis, because the high GdmCl concentrations required to denature the anion-stabilized tetramer do not allow refolding of the unfolded monomers. The formation of amyloid fibrils by TTR requires that its normal tetrameric structure dissociate to alternatively folded monomers, a process mediated by acidification (pH 5-4). This process is inhibited by Cl(-) ions in a concentration-dependent fashion. Chloride ion may not be the relevant physiological TTR stability modulator, but it is the main focus of these studies explaining the hysteresis observed in the denaturation and refolding studies with GdmCl.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously described the complexity of the folding of the lipolytic enzyme cutinase from F. solani pisi in guanidinium chloride. Here we extend the refolding analysis by refolding from the pH-denatured state and analyze the folding behaviour in the presence of the weaker denaturant urea and the stronger denaturant guanidinium thiocyanate. In urea there is excellent consistency between equilibrium and kinetic data, and the intermediate accumulating at low denaturant concentrations is off-pathway. However, in GdmCl, refolding rates, and consequently the stability of the native state, vary significantly depending on whether refolding takes place from the pH- or GdmCl-denatured state, possibly due to transient formation of aggregates during folding from the GdmCl-denatured state. In GdmSCN, stability is reduced by several kcal/mol with significant aggregation in the unfolding transition region. The basis for the large variation in folding behaviour may be the denaturants' differential ability to support formation of exposed hydrophobic regions and consequent changes in aggregative properties during refolding.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The molecular weights of different aggregational states of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase purified from the leaves of Zea mays have been determined by measurement of the molecular diameter using a Malvern dynamic light scattering spectrometer. Using these data to identify the monomer, dimer, tetramer, and larger aggregate(s) the effect of pH and various ligands on the aggregational equilibria of this enzyme have been determined. At neutral pH the enzyme favored the tetrameric form. At both low and high pH the tetramer dissociated, followed by aggregation to a "large" inactive form. The order of dissociation at least at low pH appeared to be two-step: from tetramer to dimers followed by dimer to monomers. The monomers then aggregate to a large aggregate, which is inactive. The presence of EDTA at pH 8 protected the enzyme against both inactivation and large aggregate formation. Dilution of the enzyme at pH 7 at room temperature results in driving the equilibrium from tetramer to dimer. The presence of malate with EDTA stabilizes the dimer as the predominant form at low protein concentrations. The presence of the substrate phosphoenolpyruvate alone and with magnesium and bicarbonate induced formation of the tetramer, and decreased the dissociation constant (Kd) of the tetrameric form. The inhibitor malate, however, induced dissociation of the tetramer as evidenced by an increase in the Kd of the tetramer.  相似文献   

9.
Dissimilatory oxidation of thiosulfate in the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium limicola f. thiosulfatophilum is carried out by the ubiquitous sulfur-oxidizing (Sox) multi-enzyme system. In this system, SoxY plays a key role, functioning as the sulfur substrate-binding protein that offers its sulfur substrate, which is covalently bound to a conserved C-terminal cysteine, to another oxidizing Sox enzyme. Here, we report the crystal structures of a stand-alone SoxY protein of C. limicola f. thiosulfatophilum, solved at 2.15 A and 2.40 A resolution using X-ray diffraction data collected at 100 K and room temperature, respectively. The structure reveals a monomeric Ig-like protein, with an N-terminal alpha-helix, that oligomerizes into a tetramer via conserved contact regions between the monomers. The tetramer can be described as a dimer of dimers that exhibits one large hydrophobic contact region in each dimer and two small hydrophilic interface patches in the tetramer. At the tetramer interface patch, two conserved redox-active C-terminal cysteines form an intersubunit disulfide bridge. Intriguingly, SoxY exhibits a dimer/tetramer equilibrium that is dependent on the redox state of the cysteines and on the type of sulfur substrate component bound to them. Taken together, the dimer/tetramer equilibrium, the specific interactions between the subunits in the tetramer, and the significant conservation level of the interfaces strongly indicate that these SoxY oligomers are biologically relevant.  相似文献   

10.
Guanidine hydrochloride and urea-induced unfolding of B. malayi hexokinase (BmHk), a tetrameric protein, was examined in detail by using various optical spectroscopic techniques, enzymatic activity measurements, and size-exclusion chromatography. The equilibrium unfolding of BmHk by guanidine hydrochloride (GdmCl) and urea proceeded through stabilization of several unique oligomeric intermediates. In the presence of low concentrations of GdmCl, stabilization of an enzymatically active folded dimer of BmHk was observed. However an enzymatically inactive dimer of BmHk was observed for urea-treated BmHk. This is the first report of an enzymatically active dimer of hexokinase from any human filarial parasite. Furthermore, although complete recovery of the native enzyme was observed on refolding of BmHk samples denatured by use of low concentrations of GdmCl or urea, no recovery of the native enzyme was observed for BmHk samples denatured by use of high concentrations of GdmCl or urea.  相似文献   

11.
Recombinant human phenylalanine hydroxylase (hPAH, phenylalanine 4-monooxygenase EC 1.14.16.1) is catalytically active both as a tetramer and a dimer [Knappskog, P.M., Flatmark, T., Aarden, J.M., Haavik, J. and Martínez, A. (1996) Eur. J. Biochem. 242, 813-821]. In the present study we have further characterized the differences in kinetic and regulatory properties of the two oligomeric forms when expressed in Escherichia coli. The positive cooperativity of L-Phe binding to the tetrameric form both in enzyme kinetic studies (h = 1.6) and intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence measurements (h = 2.3) was abolished in the dimer, which also revealed a catalytic efficiency (Vmax/[S]0.5) of only 35% of the tetramer. Whereas the catalytic activity of the tetramer was activated fivefold to sixfold by preincubation with L-Phe, the dimer revealed only a 1.6-fold activation. The crystal structure has identified a five-residue flexible hinge region (Asp425-Gln429) that links the beta-strand Tbeta2 (Ile421-Leu424) and the 24 residue amphipathic alpha-helix Talpha1 (Gln428-Lys452) at the C-terminus which forms an antiparallel coiled-coil structure in the center of the tetramer [Fusetti, F., Erlandsen, H., Flatmark, T. & Stevens, R.C. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 16962-16967]. The potential role of this flexible hinge in the tetramerization and the conformational transition of wt-hPAH on the cooperative binding of L-Phe was examined by site-specific mutagenesis. Substitution of Thr427 by a Pro (as in tyrosine hydroxylase) resulted in a mutant protein which was isolated mainly (about 95%) as a dimer. The isolated tetramer of T427P revealed no kinetic cooperativity of L-Phe binding, the catalytic efficiency (Vmax/[S]0.5) was decreased to about 39% of the wild-type tetramer and it was not activated by L-Phe preincubation. The dimeric forms of T427P and wt-hPAH revealed rather similar kinetic properties. The lack of kinetic cooperativity of the T427P tetramer was associated with a corresponding change in the binding isotherm for L-Phe as studied by intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence measurements. Protein stability was also reduced both for the E. coli expressed and the in vitro synthesized mutant enzyme. Collectively, these results indicate that the positive cooperativity of L-Phe binding to wt-hPAH requires a tetrameric enzyme with a C-terminal flexible hinge region (Asp425-Gln429) which has a structural role in the formation of the enzyme tetramer. Furthermore, this hinge region represents a motif in the PAH structure that is involved in the conformational change transmitted through the protein on the cooperative binding of L-Phe to tetrameric wt-hPAH. This conclusion is further supported by studies on two disease (phenylketonuria)-associated mutant forms.  相似文献   

12.
While many Type II restriction enzymes are dimers with a single DNA-binding cleft between the subunits, SfiI is a tetramer of identical subunits. Two of its subunits (a dimeric unit) create one DNA-binding cleft, and the other two create a second cleft on the opposite side of the protein. The two clefts bind specific DNA cooperatively to give a complex of SfiI with two recognition sites. This complex is responsible for essentially all of the DNA-cleavage reactions by SfiI: virtually none is due to the complex with one site. The communication between the DNA-binding clefts was examined by disrupting one of the very few polar interactions in the otherwise hydrophobic interface between the dimeric units: a tyrosine hydroxyl was removed by mutation to phenylalanine. The mutant protein remained tetrameric in solution and could bind two DNA sites. But instead of being activated by binding two sites, like wild-type SfiI, it showed maximal activity when bound to a single site and had a lower activity when bound to two sites. This interaction across the dimer interface thus enforces in wild-type SfiI a cooperative transition between inactive and active states in both dimers, but without this interaction as in the mutant protein, a single dimer can undergo the transition to give a stable intermediate with one inactive dimer and one active dimer.  相似文献   

13.
The biotin-binding tetrameric proteins, streptavidin from Streptomyces avidinii and chicken egg white avidin, are excellent models for the study of subunit-subunit interactions of a multimeric protein. Efforts are thus being made to prepare mutated forms of streptavidin and avidin, which would form monomers or dimers, in order to examine their effect on quaternary structure and assembly. In the present communication, we compared the crystal structures of binding site W-->K mutations in streptavidin and avidin. In solution, both mutant proteins are known to form dimers, but upon crystallization, both formed tetramers with the same parameters as the native proteins. All of the intersubunit bonds were conserved, except for the hydrophobic interaction between biotin and the tryptophan that was replaced by lysine. In the crystal structure, the binding site of the mutated apo-avidin contains 3 molecules of structured water instead of the 5 contained in the native protein. The lysine side chain extends in a direction opposite that of the native tryptophan, the void being partially filled by an adjacent lysine residue. Nevertheless, the binding-site conformation observed for the mutant tetramer is an artificial consequence of crystal packing that would not be maintained in the solution-phase dimer. It appears that the dimer-tetramer transition may be concentration dependent, and the interaction among subunits obeys the law of mass action.  相似文献   

14.
Protein folding and aggregation are in direct competition in living systems, yet measuring the two pathways simultaneously has rarely been accomplished. In order to identify the mechanism of high-pressure dissociation of aggregates, we compared the simultaneous on- and off-pathway behavior following dilution of freshly denatured P22 tailspike protein. Tailspike assembly at 100 microg/mL was monitored at four temperatures using a combination of size-exclusion chromatography and native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and folding and aggregation rates and yields were determined. As temperature increased, the yield of native trimeric tailspike decreased from 26.1 +/- 1.3 microg/mL at 20 degrees C to 0 microg/mL at 37 degrees C. Pressure treatment dissociated 60% of the trapped aggregates created at 37 degrees C and yielded 19.8 +/- 1.1 microg/mL of native trimer following depressurization and incubation at 20 degrees C. The rate of refolding of "freshly denatured" tailspike was compared to that following pressure treatment. The trimer formation rate increased by a factor of roughly five, and the aggregate rate decreased by a factor of three, following pressure treatment. Circular dichroism and high-pressure intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence measurements support the model that a structured intermediate is formed in a rapid manner under high pressure from a pressure-sensitive aggregate population.  相似文献   

15.
The reactivation efficiency in the refolding of denatured luciferase in the presence and the absence of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) has been studied. Luciferase could be partially reactivated when the protein was denatured in high concentrations of guanidium chloride (GdmCl; >4.5 M) and the refolding was carried out in very low protein concentrations. The refolding yield was, however, significantly lower when it was performed on luciferase that had been denatured with lower concentrations of GdmCl. The efficiency of refolding decreases when the formation of aggregates increases. Three of the five luciferase mAbs tested (4G3, N2E3, S2G10) dramatically increased the yield of reactivation and simultaneously eliminated the formation of aggregates. It is proposed that these mAbs assisted the refolding of luciferase by binding to the exposed hydrophobic surface of the refolding intermediate, thus preventing it from aggregating. The epitopes interacting with these refolding-assisting mAbs are all located in the A-subdomain of the N-terminal region of luciferase. These results have also shed light on the structural features of the intermediate and its interface involved in protein aggregate formation, contributing to the understanding of the protein folding mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
To further understand oligomeric protein assembly, the folding and unfolding kinetics of the H3-H4 histone tetramer have been examined. The tetramer is the central protein component of the core nucleosome, which is the basic unit of DNA compaction into chromatin in the eukaryotic nucleus. This report provides the first kinetic folding studies of a protein containing the histone fold dimerization motif, a motif observed in several protein-DNA complexes. Previous equilibrium unfolding studies have demonstrated that, under physiological conditions, there is a dynamic equilibrium between the H3-H4 dimer and tetramer species. This equilibrium is shifted predominantly toward the tetramer in the presence of the organic osmolyte trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO). Stopped-flow methods, monitoring intrinsic tyrosine fluorescence and far-UV circular dichroism, have been used to measure folding and unfolding kinetics as a function of guanidinium hydrochloride (GdnHCl) and monomer concentrations, in 0 and 1 M TMAO. The assignment of the kinetic phases was aided by the study of an obligate H3-H4 dimer, using the H3 mutant, C110E, which destabilizes the H3-H3' hydrophobic four-helix bundle tetramer interface. The proposed kinetic folding mechanism of the H3-H4 system is a sequential process. Unfolded H3 and H4 monomers associate in a burst phase reaction to form a dimeric intermediate that undergoes a further, first-order folding process to form the native dimer in the rate-limiting step of the folding pathway. H3-H4 dimers then rapidly associate with a rate constant of > or =10(7) M(-1)sec(-1) to establish a dynamic equilibrium between the fully assembled tetramer and folded H3-H4 dimers.  相似文献   

17.
Lactate dehydrogenase from porcine skeletal muscle is a "dimer of dimers" that is stabilized in its tetrameric state by an N-terminal "arm" of approximately 20 amino acid residues. Due to the low dissociation constant of the tetramer, the dimer is inaccessible to direct analysis. Limited proteolysis during reconstitution (after dissociation at pH 2.3) yields stable "dimers". As suggested by affinity chromatography, these inactive dimers contain the dinucleotide fold of native LDH. In the presence of structure-making ions, approximately 40% activity is restored in the dimeric state [Girg, R., Jaenicke, R., & Rudolph, R. (1983) Biochem. Int. 7, 443-444]. The cleavage yields about equal amounts of three fragments, F 34, F 21, and F 14 (Mr 33.5K, 21.4K, and 13.5K, respectively). F 34 represents the intact chain lacking the N-terminal 10-11 amino acid residues; its C-terminus is heterogeneous, varying in the range between residues 326 +/- 5. F 21 contains residues 11/12 to 200 +/- 3; F 14 is a mixture of three subfragments: residues 11/12 to approximately 133, 38 to approximately 163, and 208 to approximately 327. After solubilization in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride, F 34 can be reconstituted to partially active dimers. Reactivation is determined by slow subunit refolding with subsequent diffusion-controlled dimerization, in accordance with the monomer-dimer transition in the reconstitution mechanism of the intact tetramer. Reconstitution of F 21 and F 14 is concentration dependent and leads to partially active "nicked dimers", indicating that separate domains are able to reassociate correctly to yield the native subunit arrangement.  相似文献   

18.
The number of artificial protein supramolecules has been increasing; however, control of protein oligomer formation remains challenging. Cytochrome c′ from Allochromatium vinosum (AVCP) is a homodimeric protein in its native form, where its protomer exhibits a four‐helix bundle structure containing a covalently bound five‐coordinate heme as a gas binding site. AVCP exhibits a unique reversible dimer–monomer transition according to the absence and presence of CO. Herein, domain‐swapped dimeric AVCP was constructed and utilized to form a tetramer and high‐order oligomers. The X‐ray crystal structure of oxidized tetrameric AVCP consisted of two monomer subunits and one domain‐swapped dimer subunit, which exchanged the region containing helices αA and αB between protomers. The active site structures of the domain‐swapped dimer subunit and monomer subunits in the tetramer were similar to those of the monomer subunits in the native dimer. The subunit–subunit interactions at the interfaces of the domain‐swapped dimer and monomer subunits in the tetramer were also similar to the subunit–subunit interaction in the native dimer. Reduced tetrameric AVCP dissociated to a domain‐swapped dimer and two monomers upon CO binding. Without monomers, the domain‐swapped dimers formed tetramers, hexamers, and higher‐order oligomers in the absence of CO, whereas the oligomers dissociated to domain‐swapped dimers in the presence of CO, demonstrating that the domain‐swapped dimer maintains the CO‐induced subunit dissociation behavior of native ACVP. These results suggest that protein oligomer formation may be controlled by utilizing domain swapping for a dimer–monomer transition protein.  相似文献   

19.
PKA holoenzymes containing two catalytic (C) subunits and a regulatory (R) subunit dimer are activated cooperatively by cAMP. While cooperativity involves the two tandem cAMP binding domains in each R-subunit, additional cooperativity is associated with the tetramer. Of critical importance is the flexible linker in R that contains an inhibitor site (IS). While the IS becomes ordered in the R:C heterodimer, the overall conformation of the tetramer is mediated largely by the N-Linker that connects the?D/D domain to the IS. To understand how the N-Linker contributes to assembly of tetrameric holoenzymes, we engineered a monomeric RIα that contains most of the N-Linker, RIα(73-244), and crystallized a holoenzyme complex. Part of the N-linker is now ordered by interactions with a symmetry-related dimer. This complex of two symmetry-related dimers forms a tetramer that reveals novel mechanisms for allosteric regulation and has many features associated with full-length holoenzyme. A model of the tetrameric holoenzyme, based on this structure, is consistent with previous small angle X-ray and neutron scattering data, and is validated with new SAXS data and with an RIα mutation localized to a novel interface unique to the tetramer.  相似文献   

20.
Many proteins which aggregate during refolding may form transiently populated aggregated states which do not reduce the final recovery of active species. However, the transient association of a folding intermediate will result in reduced refolding rates if the dissociation process occurs slowly. Previous studies on the refolding and aggregation of bovine carbonic anhydrase B (CAB) have shown that the molten globule first intermediate on the CAB folding pathway will form dimers and trimers prior to the formation of large aggregates (Cleland, J. L.; Wang, D. I. C. Biochemistry 1990, 29, 11072-11078; Cleland, J. L.; Wang, D. I. C. In Protein Refolding; Georgiou, G., De-Bernardez-Clark, E., Eds.; ACS Symposium Series 470; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1991; pp 169-179). Refolding of CAB from 5 M guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) was achieved at conditions ([CAB]f = 10-33 microM, [GuHCl]f = 1.0 M) which allowed complete recovery of active protein as well as the formation of a transiently populated dimer of the molten globule intermediate on the refolding pathway. A kinetic analysis of CAB refolding provided insight into the mechanism of the association phenomenon. Using the kinetic results, a model of the refolding with transient association was constructed. By adjusting a single variable, the dimer dissociation rate constant, the model prediction fit both the experimentally determined active protein and dimer concentrations. The model developed in this analysis should also be applicable to the refolding of proteins which have been observed to form aggregates during refolding. In particular, the transient association of hydrophobic folding intermediates may also occur during the refolding of other proteins.(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