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1.
The interaction of cytochrome c (cyt c) with anionic lipid membranes is known to disrupt the tightly packed native structure of the protein. This process leads to a lipid-inserted denatured state, which retains a native-like alpha-helical structure but lacks any specific tertiary interactions. The structural and dynamic properties of cyt c bound to vesicles containing an anionic phospholipid (DOPS) were investigated by amide H-(2)H exchange using two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy and electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry. The H-(2)H exchange kinetics of the core amide protons in cyt c, which in the native protein undergo exchange via an uncorrelated EX2 mechanism, exchange in the lipid vesicles via a highly concerted global transition that exposes these protected amide groups to solvent. The lack of pH dependence and the observation of distinct populations of deuterated and protonated species by mass spectrometry confirms that exchange occurs via an EX1 mechanism with a common rate of 1(+/-0.5) h(-1), which reflects the rate of transition from the lipid-inserted state, H(l), to an unprotected conformation, D(i), associated with the lipid interface.  相似文献   

2.
Szewczuk Z  Konishi Y  Goto Y 《Biochemistry》2001,40(32):9623-9630
Acetylation of Lys residues of horse cytochrome c steadily stabilizes the molten globule state in 18 mM HCl as more Lys residues are acetylated [Goto and Nishikiori (1991) J. Mol. Biol. 222, 679-686]. The dynamic features of the molten globule state were characterized by hydrogen/deuterium exchange of amide protons, monitored by mass spectrometry as each deuteration increased the protein mass by 1 Da. Electrospray mass spectrometry enabled us to monitor simultaneously the exchange kinetics of more than seven species with a different number of acetyl groups. One to four Lys residue-acetylated cytochrome c showed almost no protection of the amide protons from rapid exchange. The transition from the unprotected to the protected state occurred between five and eight Lys residue-acetylated species. For species with more than nine acetylated Lys residues, the exchange kinetics were independent of the extent of acetylation, and 26 amide protons were protected at 60 min of exchange, indicating the formation of a rigid hydrophobic core with hydrogen-bonded secondary structures. The apparent transition to the protected state required a higher degree of acetylation than the conformational transition measured by circular dichroism, which had a midpoint at about four acetylated residues. This difference in the transitions suggested a two-process model in which the exchange occurs either from the protected folded state or from the unprotected unfolded state through global unfolding. On the basis of a two-process model and with the reported values of the exchange and stability parameters, we simulated the exchange kinetics of a series of acetylated cytochrome c species. The simulated kinetics reproduced the observed kinetics well, indicating validity of this model for hydrogen exchange of the molten globule state.  相似文献   

3.
French DL  Arakawa T  Li T 《Biopolymers》2004,73(4):524-531
Spray drying is a way to generate protein solids (powders), which is also true for lyophilization. Sugars are used to protect proteins from conformational changes and chemical degradations arising from drying processes and storage conditions such as the humidity. The influence of trehalose and humidity on the conformation and hydration of spray-dried recombinant human granolucyte colony stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) and recombinant consensus interferon-alpha (rConIFN) was investigated using Fourier transform IR spectroscopy. The spectral analysis of spray-dried powders in the amide I region demonstrated that trehalose stabilized the alpha-helical conformation of both rhG-CSF and rConIFN proteins. Exposure of the pure protein powders to 33% relative humidity (RH) resulted in the formation of beta sheets and loss of turns but no change in alpha-helical structure. Trehalose reduced the magnitude of the changes in beta sheets and turns. Exposure of the pure protein powders to 75% RH resulted in the loss of alpha-helical conformation with a corresponding increase in beta structures (beta sheets and turns). Trehalose did not protect proteins from the loss of alpha-helical structures, but it reduced the formation of antiparallel beta sheets. Hydrogen-deuterium exchange (H-D exchange) was used to further characterize these hydration-induced conformational changes. At 33% RH the percent exchange of the protein decreased with increasing trehalose content, indicating a greater protection of the protein from H-D exchange by a higher concentration of trehalose. Such protection correlates with decreased conformational changes of the protein by trehalose at this humidity. At 75% RH the degree of H-D exchange of the protein was insensitive to the powder composition in all powders. Surprisingly, the H-D exchange of trehalose was low at about 20-25%, which was nearly independent of the protein/trehalose ratio and humidity, indicating that the exchangeable protons on trehalose molecules are highly protected in protein-containing powders. The observed protein hydration is related to the effect of trehalose on the conformational changes of the protein under humidity.  相似文献   

4.
The conformation and amide proton exchangeability of the peptide acetyl-K(2)-A(24)-K(2)-amide (A(24)) and its interaction with phosphatidylcholine bilayers were examined by a variety of physical techniques. When dissolved in or cast from methanol as a dried film, A(24) is predominantly alpha-helical. In aqueous media, however, A(24) exists primarily as a mixture of helical (though not necessarily alpha-helical) and random coiled structures, both of which allow rapid H-D exchange of all amide protons. When incorporated into phospholipids in the absence of water, A(24) also exists primarily as a transmembrane alpha-helix. However, upon hydration of that system, rapid exchange of all amide protons also occurs along with a marked change in the amide I absorption band of the peptide. Also, when dispersed with phosphatidylcholine in aqueous media, the conformation and thermal stability of A(24) are not significantly altered by the presence of the phospholipid or by its gel/liquid-crystalline phase transition. Differential scanning calorimetric and electron spin resonance spectroscopic studies indicate that A(24) has relatively minor effects on the thermodynamic properties of the lipid hydrocarbon chain-melting phase transition, that it does not abolish the lipid pretransition, and that its presence has no significant effect on the orientational order or rates of motion of the phospholipid hydrocarbon chains. We therefore conclude that A(24) has sufficient alpha-helical propensity, but insufficient hydrophobicity, to maintain a stable transmembrane association with phospholipid bilayers in the presence of water. Instead, it exists primarily as a dynamic mixture of helices and other conformers and resides mostly in the aqueous phase where it interacts weakly with the bilayer surface or with the polar/apolar interfacial region of phosphatidylcholine bilayers. Thus, polyalanine-based peptides are not good models for the transmembrane alpha-helical segments of natural membrane proteins.  相似文献   

5.
M F Jeng  S W Englander  G A El?ve  A J Wand  H Roder 《Biochemistry》1990,29(46):10433-10437
Hydrogen exchange and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (2D NMR) techniques were used to characterize the structure of oxidized horse cytochrome c at acid pH and high ionic strength. Under these conditions, cytochrome c is known to assume a globular conformation (A state) with properties resembling those of the molten globule state described for other proteins. In order to measure the rate of hydrogen-deuterium exchange for individual backbone amide protons in the A state, samples of oxidized cytochrome c were incubated at 20 degrees C in D2O buffer (pD 2.2, 1.5 M NaCl) for time periods ranging from 2 min to 500 h. The exchange reaction was then quenched by transferring the protein to native conditions (pD 5.3). The extent of exchange for 44 amide protons trapped in the refolded protein was measured by 2D NMR spectroscopy. The results show that this approach can provide detailed information on H-bonded secondary and tertiary structure in partially folded equilibrium forms of a protein. All of the slowly exchanging amide protons in the three major helices of native cytochrome c are strongly protected from exchange at acid pH, indicating that the A state contains native-like elements of helical secondary structure. By contrast, a number of amide protons involved in irregular tertiary H-bonds of the native structure (Gly37, Arg38, Gln42, Ile57, Lys79, and Met80) are only marginally protected in the A state, indicating that these H-bonds are unstable or absent. The H-exchange results suggest that the major helices of cytochrome c and their common hydrophobic domain are largely preserved in the globular acidic form while the loop region of the native structure is flexible and partly disordered.  相似文献   

6.
Mazon H  Marcillat O  Forest E  Smith DL  Vial C 《Biochemistry》2004,43(17):5045-5054
Our understanding of the mechanism of protein folding can be improved by the characterization of folding intermediate states. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence measurements of equilibrium GdmHCl-induced unfolding of MM-CK allow for the construction of a "phase diagram", which shows the presence of five different conformational states, including three partially folded intermediates. However, only three states are detected by using pulsed-labeled H-D exchange analyzed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. One of them is the native state, and the two other species are present in proportions strongly dependent on the GdmHCl concentration and denaturation time. The low-mass peak is due to a largely exchange-incompetent state, which has gained only approximately 10 deuteriums more than the native protein. This population of MM-CK molecules has undergone a small conformational change induced by low GdmHCl concentrations. However, this limited change is in itself not sufficient to inactivate the enzyme or is easily reversible. The high-mass peak corresponds to a population of MM-CK that is fully deuterated. The comparison of fluorescence, activity, and H-D exchange measurements shows that the maximally populated intermediate at 0.8 M GdmHCl has the characteristics of a molten globule. It has no activity; it has 55% of its native alpha-helices and a maximum fluorescence emission wavelength of approximately 341 nm, and it binds ANS strongly. However, no protection against exchange is detected under the conditions used in this work. This paradox, the presence of significant residual secondary and tertiary structures detected by optical probes and the total deuteration of its amide protons detected by H-D exchange and mass spectrometry, could be explained by a highly dynamic MM-CK molten globule.  相似文献   

7.
The solvent protection of the amide backbone in bovine insulin fibrils was studied by FT-IR spectroscopy. In the mature fibrils, approximately 85 +/- 2% of amide protons are protected. Of those "trapped" protons, a further 25 +/- 2 or 35 +/- 2% is H-D exchanged after incubation for 1 h at 1 GPa and 25 degrees C or 0.1 MPa and 100 degrees C, respectively. In contrast to the native or unfolded protein, fibrils do not H-D exchange upon incubation at 65 degrees C. A complete deuteration of H(2)O-grown fibrils occurs when the beta-sheet structure is reassembled in a 75 wt % DMSO/D(2)O solution. Our findings suggest a densely packed environment around the amide protons involved in the intermolecular beta-sheet motive. In disagreement with the concept of "amyloid fibers as water-filled nanotubes" [Perutz, M. F., et al. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99, 5591-5595], elution of D(2)O-grown fibrils with H(2)O is complete, which is reflected by the vanishing of D(2)O bending vibrations at 1214 cm(-)(1). This implies the absence of "trapped water" within insulin fibrils. The rigid conformations of the native and fibrillar insulin contrast with transient intermediate states docking at the fibrils' ends. Room-temperature seeding is accompanied by an accelerated H-D exchange in insulin molecules in the act of docking and integrating with the seeds, proving that the profound structural disruption is the sine qua non of forming an aggregation-competent conformation.  相似文献   

8.
In this study, we have used CD and NMR techniques to investigate the secondary structure of (apo-) cytochrome c both in solution and when associated with micelles. In aqueous solution, the holoprotein cytochrome c is tightly folded at secondary and tertiary levels and differs strongly from its random-coiled precursor. However, in the presence of 12-PN/12-Pglycol (9:1) micelles, we observed a remarkable resemblance between the CD spectra of these partially helical proteins. The water-lipid interface induces a secondary folding of apocytochrome c, whereas cytochrome c is suggested to partially lose its tertiary structure. The exchange of all amide protons and, using deuterium-labeled proteins, of all amide deuterons with the solvent was monitored by NMR. A rapid exchange rate was observed, indicating that these folding states are highly dynamic. Saturation-transfer NMR of micelle-associated apocytochrome c showed that the exchange takes place at the (sub-) second time scale. The holoprotein in the presence of micelles was found to have two distinct exchange rates: (1) a fast rate, comparable to that found for the micelle-associated precursor and 4.5 times slower than that of the random-coiled apocytochrome c, and (2) a slow rate which is 75 times slower than the precursor in solution. Urea denaturation studies showed the micelle-bound proteins to have a low helix stability, which explains the inability of the lipid-induced secondary structure to prevent its labile protons from rapid exchange. The uniqueness of this lipid-induced highly dynamic folding state of (apo-) cytochrome c is demonstrated by comparison with amphiphilic polypeptides like melittin, and its implications for membrane translocation and functioning are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Y Pan  M S Briggs 《Biochemistry》1992,31(46):11405-11412
Ubiquitin adopts a non-native folded structure in 60% methanol solution at low pH. Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (2D NMR) was used to measure the hydrogen-exchange rates of backbone amide protons of ubiquitin in both native and methanol forms, and to characterize the structure of ubiquitin in the methanol state. Protection factors (the ratios of experimentally determined exchange rates to the rates calculated for an unfolded polypeptide) for protons in the native form of ubiquitin range from less than 10 to greater than 10(5). Most of the protons that are protected from exchange are located in regions of hydrogen-bonded secondary structure. The most strongly protected backbone amide protons are those of residues comprising the hydrophobic core. Hydrogen exchange from ubiquitin in methanol solution was too rapid to measure directly by 2D NMR, so a labeling scheme was employed, in which exchange with solvent occurred while the protein was in methanol solution. Exchange was quenched by dilution with aqueous buffer after the desired labeling time, and proton occupancies were measured by 1H NMR of the native form of the protein. Protection factors for protons in the methanol form of ubiquitin range from 2.6 to 42, with all protected protons located in hydrogen-bonded structure in the native form. Again, the most strongly protected protons are those of residues in the hydrophobic core. Comparison of the patterns of the hydrogen-exchange rates in the native and methanol forms indicates that almost all of the native secondary structure persists in the methanol form, but that it is almost uniformly destabilized by 4-6 kcal/mol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
To characterize the interaction of peripheral proteins and membranes at the molecular level, we studied the reversible association of bovine alpha-lactalbumin (BLA) with lipid bilayers composed of different molecular forms of phosphatidylserine or equimolar mixtures of these phosphatidylserine forms and egg yolk phosphatidylcholine. At pH 4.5, almost all BLA (>90%) associates to negatively charged small unilamellar vesicles. The conformational changes that binding to these bilayers induced on the protein were characterized by circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy. Because binding of BLA to negatively charged vesicles is reverted by adjusting the pH back to >6.0, we also investigated the conformation of the membrane-bound protein by NMR-monitored H-D exchange of the backbone amide protons. The conformation adopted by BLA bound to these bilayers resembles a molten globule-like state but the negative ellipticity at 222 nm and the apparent alpha-helix content of the bound protein senses the changes in the physical properties of the membrane. Binding to bilayers in the gel state appears to correlate with an increased amount of alpha-helical structure and with a lower extent of integration into the membrane, corresponding to the adsorbed protein, while the opposite is found for BLA bound to vesicles in the liquid-crystalline phase, corresponding to the embedded conformation. A common feature for the membrane-bound conformations of BLA is that the amphipathic helix C (residues 86 to 99) is an important determinant for the adsorption and further integration of the protein into the membrane.  相似文献   

11.
The HIV-1 p17 matrix protein is a multifunctional protein that interacts with other molecules including proteins and membranes. The dynamic structure between its folded and partially unfolded states can be critical for the recognition of interacting molecules. One of the most important roles of the p17 matrix protein is its localization to the plasma membrane with the Gag polyprotein. The myristyl group attached to the N-terminus on the p17 matrix protein functions as an anchor for binding to the plasma membrane. Biochemical studies revealed that two regions are important for its function: D14–L31 and V84–V88. Here, the dynamic structures of the p17 matrix protein were studied using NMR for relaxation and amide proton exchange experiments at the physiological pH of 7.0. The results revealed that the α12-loop, which includes the 14–31 region, was relatively flexible, and that helix 4, including the 84–88 region, was the most protected helix in this protein. However, the residues in the α34-loop near helix 4 had a low order parameter and high exchange rate of amide protons, indicating high flexibility. This region is probably flexible because this loop functions as a hinge for optimizing the interactions between helices 3 and 4. The C-terminal long region of K113-Y132 adopted a disordered structure. Furthermore, the C-terminal helix 5 appeared to be slightly destabilized due to the flexible C-terminal tail based on the order parameters. Thus, the dynamic structure of the p17 matrix protein may be related to its multiple functions.  相似文献   

12.
We have defined the structural and dynamic properties of an early folding intermediate of beta-lactoglobulin known to contain non-native alpha-helical structure. The folding of beta-lactoglobulin was monitored over the 100 micros--10 s time range using ultrarapid mixing techniques in conjunction with fluorescence detection and hydrogen exchange labeling probed by heteronuclear NMR. An initial increase in Trp fluorescence with a time constant of 140 micros is attributed to formation of a partially helical compact state. Within 2 ms of refolding, well protected amide protons indicative of stable hydrogen bonded structure were found only in a domain comprising beta-strands F, G and H, and the main alpha-helix, which was thus identified as the folding core of beta-lactoglobulin. At the same time, weak protection (up to approximately 10-fold) of amide protons in a segment spanning residues 12--21 is consistent with formation of marginally stable non-native alpha-helices near the N-terminus. Our results indicate that efficient folding, despite some local non-native structural preferences, is insured by the rapid formation of a native-like alpha/beta core domain.  相似文献   

13.
The secondary structure of crambin in solution has been determined using two-dimensional NMR and is found to be essentially identical to that of the crystal structure. The H-D exchange of most amide protons can be accounted for in terms of the hydrogen bonds found in the X-ray structure. Exceptions are the amide protons of Cys-4 and Ser-6, which exchange more slowly than expected, and of Asn-46 for which the exchange is faster. These results might be explained by a slightly different conformation of the C-terminal region of the protein in solution. The slow exchange of the amides of Cys-32 and Glu-23 might be due to aggregation involving an extremely hydrophobic part of the protein in solution.  相似文献   

14.
Bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) is stabilized by 3 disulfide bonds, between cysteines 30-51, 5-55, and 14-38. To better understand the influence of disulfide bonds on local protein structure and dynamics, we have measured amide proton exchange rates in 2 folded variants of BPTI, [5-55]Ala and [30-51; 14-38]V5A55, which share no common disulfide bonds. These proteins resemble disulfide-bonded intermediates that accumulate in the BPTI folding pathway. Essentially the same amide hydrogens are protected from exchange in both of the BPTI variants studied here as in native BPTI, demonstrating that the variants adopt fully folded, native-like structures in solution. However, the most highly protected amide protons in each variant differ, and are contained within the sequences of previously studied peptide models of related BPTI folding intermediates containing either the 5-55 or the 30-51 disulfide bond.  相似文献   

15.
Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy has been used to study the thermally induced exchange characteristics of those backbone amide protons which persist H-D exchange at ambient conditions in ribonuclease A, in wild type ribonuclease T1 and some of its variants, and in the histone-like protein HBsu. The H-D exchange processes were induced by increasing the thermal energy of the protein solutions in two ways: (i) by linearly increasing the temperature, and (ii) by a temperature jump. To trace the H-D exchange in the proteins, various infrared absorption bands known to be sensitive to H-D exchange were used as specific monitors. Characteristic H-D exchange curves were obtained from which the endpoints (TH/D) of H-D exchange could be determined. The H-D exchange curves, the TH/D-values and the phase transition temperatures Tm were used to estimate the structural flexibility and stability of the given proteins. It is suggested that time-resolved FTIR spectroscopy can be used to determine global stability parameters of proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Interaction of myelin basic protein with micelles of dodecylphosphocholine   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Interactions of myelin basic protein (MBP) and peptides derived from it with micelles of dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) and perdeuterated DPC have been studied by proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) at 400 MHz and by circular dichroism (CD). When MBP binds to DPC micelles, it acquires about 18% alpha-helicity. The CD spectra of various peptides derived by cleavage of MBP indicate that a major alpha-helical region occurs in residues 85-99 just before the sequence of three prolyl residues 100-102. From line broadenings by fatty acid spin-labels in the micelles and from changes in chemical shifts, the NMR data identify specific residues in MBP that participate in lipid binding. One such sequence is an alpha-helical region from residues 85 to 95, and others occur around methionine-21 and between residues 117 and 135. The different effects of C5, C12, and C16 spin-labels suggest that some segments of the protein may penetrate beyond the dipolar interfacial region of the micelles into the hydrophobic interior, but no part of the protein is protected by the micelles against rapid exchange of its amide groups with the aqueous environment. Even at a lipid to protein molar ratio of 200/1, most NMR resonances from side chains of amino acid residues are not appreciably broadened, suggesting that much of the polypeptide remains highly mobile.  相似文献   

17.
The changes of H-D exchange rates upon protein-protein interactions are generally interpreted as a result of the changes of the dynamic properties of the proteins. The effect of trypsin binding on the H-D exchange kinetics of some trypsin inhibitor amide H's was reported (Simon et al., 1984). In this paper the electrostatic potential originating from the trypsin molecule is calculated at the positions of the studied amide H's in the trypsin-trypsin inhibitor complex. We conclude that the observed decrease of the exchange rates is mainly due to the electrostatic field of the trypsin molecule.  相似文献   

18.
Rhodobacter capsulatus synthesizes two homologous protein complexes capable of activating molecular H(2), a membrane-bound [NiFe] hydrogenase (HupSL) linked to the respiratory chain, and an H(2) sensor encoded by the hupUV genes. The activities of hydrogen-deuterium (H-D) exchange catalyzed by the hupSL-encoded and the hupUV-encoded enzymes in the presence of D(2) and H(2)O were studied comparatively. Whereas HupSL is in the membranes, HupUV activity was localized in the soluble cytoplasmic fraction. Since the hydrogenase gene cluster of R. capsulatus contains a gene homologous to hoxH, which encodes the large subunit of NAD-linked tetrameric soluble hydrogenases, the chromosomal hoxH gene was inactivated and hoxH mutants were used to demonstrate the H-D exchange activity of the cytoplasmic HupUV protein complex. The H-D exchange reaction catalyzed by HupSL hydrogenase was maximal at pH 4. 5 and inhibited by acetylene and oxygen, whereas the H-D exchange catalyzed by the HupUV protein complex was insensitive to acetylene and oxygen and did not vary significantly between pH 4 and pH 11. Based on these properties, the product of the accessory hypD gene was shown to be necessary for the synthesis of active HupUV enzyme. The kinetics of HD and H(2) formed in exchange with D(2) by HupUV point to a restricted access of protons and gasses to the active site. Measurement of concentration changes in D(2), HD, and H(2) by mass spectrometry showed that, besides the H-D exchange reaction, HupUV oxidized H(2) with benzyl viologen, produced H(2) with reduced methyl viologen, and demonstrated true hydrogenase activity. Therefore, not only with respect to its H(2) signaling function in the cell, but also to its catalytic properties, the HupUV enzyme represents a distinct class of hydrogenases.  相似文献   

19.
The conformation and amide hydrogen exchangeability of the hydrophobic peptide Lys2-Gly-Leu24-Lys2-Ala-amide were studied by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. In these studies information on the secondary structure of the peptide was obtained from an examination of the contours of both the amide I and amide II absorption bands. The conformationally sensitive amide I and amide II regions of the infrared spectra suggest that the peptide is predominantly alpha-helical and that it contains some non-alpha-helical structures which are probably in an extended conformation. Studies of the exchangeability of the amide protons of the peptide indicate that there are two populations of amide protons which differ markedly with respect to their exchangeability with the bulk solvent phase, whether the peptide is dissolved in methanol or dispersed in hydrated lipid bilayers. One population of amide protons is very readily exchangeable, and our data suggest that it arises primarily but not exclusively from the extended regions of the peptide. The other population exchanges very slowly with the bulk solvent and appears to originate entirely from the alpha-helical domain of the peptide. This latter population is virtually unexchangeable when the peptide is dispersed in hydrated phosphatidylcholine bilayers but can be largely exchanged when the peptide is solubilized with methanol. We suggest that this slowly exchanging population of amide protons arises from the central part of the hydrophobic polyleucine core which forms a very stable alpha-helix that would be deeply buried in the hydrophobic domain of hydrated lipid bilayers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
In a native protein, the exchange of a peptide amide proton with solvent occurs by one of two pathways, either directly from the folded protein, or via unfolding, exchange taking place from the unfolded protein. From the thermal unfolding rate constants, the contribution of unfolding to the over-all kinetics as a function of solvent and temperature has been determined. Exchange involving unfolding of the protein is characterized by a high activation energy, in the range of 50 to 60 Cal per mol. The activiation energy (Eapp) of the rates of exchange directly from the folded protein is approximately 20 to 25 Cal per mol. Because for the proton transfer step, Eapp approximately equal to 20 Cal per mol, the activation energy for any contributing protein conformational process(es) is approximately equal to 0 to 5 Cal per mol. Most, if not all, of the peptide amide protons in a folded protein can exchange directly with solvent without the protein unfolding. The number of "slowly" exchanging protons at a given condition of pH and temperature is not related to a discrete structural unit, but rather to the distribution of observed rates within the broader distribution of actual rates. The large attenuation of hydrogen exchange rates in folded proteins, resulting in a distribution of first order rates over 6 orders of magnitude, is primarily due to the effects of restricted solvent accessibility of labile protons in the three-dimensional structure. Any protein conformational process, such as protein fluctuations, invoked to explain the solvent accessibility must be of low activation energy and attenuated by ethanol and other co-solvents (Woodward, C. K., Ellis, L. M., and Rosenberg, A. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 440-444).  相似文献   

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