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1.
The magnitude of the conformational entropy change experienced by the peptide backbone upon protein folding was investigated experimentally and by computational analysis. Experimentally, two different pairs of mutants of a 33 amino acid peptide corresponding to the leucine zipper region of GCN4 were used for high-sensitivity microcalorimetric analysis. Each pair of mutants differed only by having alanine or glycine at a specific solvent-exposed position under conditions in which the differences in stability could be attributed to differences in the conformational entropy of the unfolded state. The mutants studied were characterized by different stabilities but had identical heat capacity changes of unfolding (ΔCp), identical solvent-related entropies of unfolding (ΔSsolv), and identical enthalpies of unfolding (ΔH) at equivalent temperatures. Accordingly, the differences in stability between the different mutants could be attributed to differences in conformational entropy. The computational studies were aimed at generating the energy profile of backbone conformations as a function of the main chain dihedral angles ϕ and ϱ. The energy profiles permit a direct calculation of the probability distribution of different conformers and therefore of the conformational entropy of the backbone. The experimental results presented in this paper indicate that the presence of the methyl group in alanine reduces the conformational entropy of the peptide backbone by 2.46 ± 0.2 cal/K · mol with respect to that of glycine, consistent with a 3.4-fold reduction in the number of allowed conformations in the alanine-containing peptides. Similar results were obtained from the energy profiles. The computational analysis also indicates that the addition of further carbon atoms to the side chain had only a small effect as long as the side chains were unbranched at position β. A further reduction with respect to Ala of only 0.61 and 0.81 cal/K · mol in the backbone entropy was obtained for leucine and lysine, respectively. β-branching (Val) produces the largest decrease in conformational entropy (1.92 cal/K · mol less than Ala). Finally, the backbone entropy change associated with the unfolding of an α-helix is 6.51 cal/K · mol for glycine. These and previous results have allowed a complete estimation of the conformational entropy changes associated with protein folding. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
The general thermodynamic principles behind pH driven conformational transitions of biological macromolecules are well understood. What is less obvious is how they can be used to engineer pH switches in proteins. The acid unfolding of staphylococcal nuclease (SNase) was used to illustrate different factors that can affect pH-driven conformational transitions. Acid unfolding is a structural transition driven by preferential H+ binding to the acid unfolded state (U) over the native (N) state of a protein. It is the result of carboxylic groups that titrate with more normal pKa values in the U state than in the N state. Acid unfolding profiles of proteins reflect a balance between electrostatic and non-electrostatic contributions to stability. Several strategies were used in attempts to turn SNase into an acid insensitive protein: (1) enhancing global stability of the protein with mutagenesis or with osmolytes, (2) use of high salt concentrations to screen Coulomb interactions, (3) stabilizing the N state through specific anion effects, (4) removing Asp or Glu residues that titrate with depressed pKa values in the N state, and (5) removing basic residues that might have strong repulsive interactions in the N state at low pH. The only effective way to engineer acid resistance in SNase is not through modulation of pKa values of Asp/Glu but by enhancing the global stability of the protein. Modulation of pH-driven conformational transitions by selective manipulation of the electrostatic component of the switch is an extremely difficult undertaking.  相似文献   

3.
The thermodynamics and kinetics of folding of common-type acylphosphatase have been studied under a variety of experimental conditions and compared with those of the homologous muscle acylphosphatase. Intrinsic fluorescence and circular dichroism have been used as spectroscopic probes to follow the folding and unfolding reactions. Both proteins appear to fold via a two-state mechanism. Under all the conditions studied, common-type acylphosphatase possesses a lower conformational stability than the muscle form. Nevertheless, common-type acylphosphatase folds more rapidly, suggesting that the conformational stability and the folding rate are not correlated in contrast to recent observations for a number of other proteins. The unfolding rate of common-type acylphosphatase is much higher than that of the muscle enzyme, indicating that the differences in conformational stability between the two proteins are primarily determined by differences in the rate of unfolding. The equilibrium m value is markedly different for the two proteins in the pH range of maximum conformational stability (5. 0-7.5); above pH 8.0, the m value for common-type acylphosphatase decreases abruptly and becomes similar to that of the muscle enzyme. Moreover, at pH 9.2, the dependencies of the folding and unfolding rate constants of common-type acylphosphatase on denaturant concentration (mf and mu values, respectively) are notably reduced with respect to pH 5.5. The pH-induced decrease of the m value can be attributed to the deprotonation of three histidine residues that are present only in the common-type isoenzyme. This would decrease the positive net charge of the protein, leading to a greater compactness of the denatured state. The folding and unfolding rates of common-type acylphosphatase are not, however, significantly different at pH 5.5 and 9.2, indicating that this change in compactness of the denatured and transition states does not have a notable influence on the rate of protein folding.  相似文献   

4.
The theory, assumptions and limitations are outlined for a simple protein engineering approach to the problem of the stability and pathway of protein folding. It is a general procedure for analysing structure-activity relationships in non-covalent bonding, including enzyme catalysis, that relates experimentally accessible data to changes in non-covalent bonding. Kinetic and equilibrium measurements on the unfolding and refolding of mutant proteins can be used to map the formation of structure in transition states and folding intermediates. For example, the ratio of the changes in the activation energy of unfolding and the free energy of unfolding on mutation is measured to give a parameter phi. There are two extreme values of phi that are often found in practice and may be interpreted in a simple manner. A value of phi = 0 implies that the structure at the site of mutation is as folded in the transition state as it is in the folded state. Conversely, phi = 1 shows that the structure at the site of mutation is as unfolded in the transition state as it is in the unfolded structure. Fractional values of phi are more difficult to interpret and require a more sophisticated approach. The most suitable mutations involve truncation of side-chains to remove moieties that preferably make few interactions with the rest of the protein and do not pair with buried charges. Fractional values of phi found for this type of mutation may imply that there is partial non-covalent bond formation or a mixture of states. The major assumptions of the method are: (1) mutation does not alter the pathway of folding; (2) mutation does not significantly change the structure of the folded state; (3) mutation does not perturb the structure of the unfolded state; and (4) the target groups do not make new interactions with new partners during the course of reaction energy. Assumptions (2) and (3) are not necessarily essential for the simple cases of phi = 0 or 1, the most common values, since effects of disruption of structure can cancel out. Assumption (4) may be checked by the double-mutant cycle procedure, which may be analysed to isolate the effects of just a pair of interactions against a complicated background. This analysis provides the formal basis of the accompanying studies on the stability and pathway of folding of barnase, where it is seen that the theory holds very well in practice.  相似文献   

5.
The equilibrium stability and conformational unfolding kinetics of the [C40A, C95A] and [C65S, C72S] mutants of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase A) have been studied. These mutants are analogues of two nativelike intermediates, des[40-95] and des[65-72], whose formation is rate-limiting for oxidative folding and reductive unfolding at 25 degrees C and pH 8.0. Upon addition of guanidine hydrochloride, both mutants exhibit a fast conformational unfolding phase when monitored by absorbance and fluorescence, as well as a slow phase detected only by fluorescence which corresponds to the isomerizations of Pro93 and Pro114. The amplitudes of the slow phase indicate that the two prolines, Pro93 and Pro114, are fully cis in the folded state of the mutants and furthermore that the 40-95 disulfide bond is not responsible for the quenching of Tyr92 fluorescence observed in the slow unfolding phase, contrary to an earlier proposal [Rehage, A., and Schmid, F. X. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 1499-1505]. The ratio of the kinetic unfolding m value to the equilibrium m value indicates that the transition state for conformational unfolding in the mutants exposes little solvent-accessible area, as in the wild-type protein, indicating that the unfolding pathway is not dramatically altered by the reduction of the 40-95 or 65-72 disulfide bond. The stabilities of the folded mutants are compared to that of wild-type RNase A. These stabilities indicate that the reduction of des[40-95] to the 2S species is rate-limited by global conformational unfolding, whereas that of des[65-72] is rate-limited by local conformational unfolding. The isomerization of Pro93 may be rate-limiting for the reduction of the 40-95 disulfide bond in the native protein and in the des[65-72] intermediate.  相似文献   

6.
Protein aggregation or misfolding in the cell is connected with many genetic diseases and can result from substitutions in proteins. Substitutions can influence the protein stability and folding rates in both intermediate and native states. The equilibrium urea-induced unfolding was studied for mutant apomyoglobins carrying substitutions of the conserved nonfunctional residues Val10, Trp14, Ile111, Leu115, Met131, and Leu135 with Ala. Conformational transitions were monitored by intrinsic Trp fluorescence and far-UV circular dichroism. Free energy changes upon transition from the native to the intermediate state and from the intermediate to the unfolded state were determined. All substitutions considerably decreased the stability of native apomyoglobin, whereas the effect on the stability of the intermediate state was essentially smaller.  相似文献   

7.
A number of residues in globins family are well conserved but are not directly involved in the primary oxygen-carrying function of these proteins. A possible role for these conserved, non-functional residues has been suggested in promoting a rapid and correct folding process to the native tertiary structure. To test this hypothesis, we have studied pH-induced equilibrium unfolding of mutant apomyoglobins with substitutions of the conserved residues Trp14 and Met131, which are not involved in the function of myoglobin, by various amino acids. This allowed estimating their impact on the stability of various conformational states of the proteins and selecting conditions for a folding kinetics study. The results obtained from circular dichroism, tryptophan fluorescence, and differential scanning microcalorimetry for these mutant proteins were compared with those for the wild type protein and for a mutant with the non-conserved Val17 substituted by Ala. In the native folded state, all of the mutant apoproteins have a compact globular structure, but are destabilized in comparison to the wild type protein. The pH-induced denaturation of the mutant proteins occurs through the formation of a molten globule-like intermediate similar to that of the wild type protein. Thermodynamic parameters for all of the proteins were calculated using the three state model. Stability of equilibrium intermediates at pH ~4.0 was shown to be slightly affected by the mutations. Thus, all of the above substitutions influence the stability of the native state of these proteins. The cooperativity of conformational transitions and the exposed to solvent protein surface were also changed, but not for the substitution at Val17.  相似文献   

8.
The role of electrostatic interactions in the stability and the folding of the N-terminal domain of the ribosomal protein L9 (NTL9) was investigated by determining the effects of varying the pH conditions. Urea denaturations and thermal unfolding experiments were used to measure the free energy of folding, DeltaG degrees, at 18 different pH values, ranging from pH 1.1 to pH 10.5. Folding rates were measured at 19 pH values between pH 2.1 and pH 9.5, and unfolding rates were determined at 15 pH values in this range using stopped-flow fluorescence experiments. The protein is maximally stable between pH 5.5 and 7.5 with a value of DeltaG degrees =4.45 kcal mol(-1). The folding rate reaches a maximum at pH 5.5, however the change in folding rates with pH is relatively modest. Over the pH range of 2.1 to 5.5 there is a small increase in folding rates, ln (k(f)) changes from 5.1 to 6.8. However, the change in stability is more dramatic, with a difference of 2.6 kcal mol(-1) between pH 2.0 and pH 5.4. The change in stability is largely due to the smaller barrier for unfolding at low pH values. The natural log of the unfolding rates varies by approximately four units between pH 2.1 and pH 5.5. The stability of the protein decreases above pH 7.5 and again the change is largely due to changes in the unfolding rate. ln (k(f)) varies by less than one unit between pH 5.5 and pH 9.5 while DeltaG degrees decreases by 2.4 kcal mol(-1) over the range of pH 5. 4 to pH 10.0, which corresponds to a change in ln K(eq) of 4.0. These studies show that pH-dependent interactions contribute significantly to the overall stability of the protein but have only a small effect upon the folding kinetics, indicating that electrostatic interactions are weakly formed in the transition state for folding.  相似文献   

9.
Common-type acylphosphatase is a small cytosolic enzyme whose catalytic properties and three-dimensional structure are known in detail. All the acidic residues of the enzyme have been replaced by noncharged residues in order to assess their contributions to the conformational stability of acylphosphatase. The enzymatic activity parameters and the conformational free energy of each mutant were determined by enzymatic activity assays and chemically induced unfolding, respectively. Some mutants exhibit very similar conformational stability, DeltaG(H2O), and specific activity values as compared to the wild-type enzyme. By contrast, six mutants show a significant reduction of conformational stability and two mutants are more stable than the wild-type protein. Although none of the mutated acidic residues is directly involved in the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme, our results indicate that mutations of residues located on the surface of the protein are responsible for a structural distortion which propagate up to the active site. We found a good correlation between the free energy of unfolding and the enzymatic activity of acylphosphatase. This suggests that enzymatic activity measurements can provide valuable indications on the conformational stability of acylphosphatase mutants, provided the mutated residue lies far apart from the active site. Moreover, our results indicate that the distortion of hydrogen bonds rather than the loss of electrostatic interactions, contributes to the decrease of the conformational stability of the protein.  相似文献   

10.
Although the folding rates of proteins have been studied extensively, both experimentally and theoretically, and many native state topological parameters have been proposed to correlate with or predict these rates, unfolding rates have received much less attention. Moreover, unfolding rates have generally been thought either to not relate to native topology in the same manner as folding rates, perhaps depending on different topological parameters, or to be more difficult to predict. Using a dataset of 108 proteins including two-state and multistate folders, we find that both unfolding and folding rates correlate strongly, and comparably well, with well-established measures of native topology, the absolute contact order and the long range order, with correlation coefficient values of 0.75 or higher. In addition, compared to folding rates, the absolute values of unfolding rates vary more strongly with native topology, have a larger range of values, and correlate better with thermodynamic stability. Similar trends are observed for subsets of different protein structural classes. Taken together, these results suggest that choosing a scaffold for protein engineering may require a compromise between a simple topology that will fold sufficiently quickly but also unfold quickly, and a complex topology that will unfold slowly and hence have kinetic stability, but fold slowly. These observations, together with the established role of kinetic stability in determining resistance to thermal and chemical denaturation as well as proteases, have important implications for understanding fundamental aspects of protein unfolding and folding and for protein engineering and design.  相似文献   

11.
The influence of protein stability on the adsorption and desorption behavior to surfaces with fundamentally different properties (negatively charged, positively charged, hydrophilic, and hydrophobic) was examined by surface plasmon resonance measurements. Three engineered variants of human carbonic anhydrase II were used that have unchanged surface properties but large differences in stability. The orientation and conformational state of the adsorbed protein could be elucidated by taking all of the following properties of the protein variants into account: stability, unfolding, adsorption, and desorption behavior. Regardless of the nature of the surface, there were correlation between (i) the protein stability and kinetics of adsorption, with an increased amplitude of the first kinetic phase of adsorption with increasing stability; (ii) the protein stability and the extent of maximally adsorbed protein to the actual surface, with an increased amount of adsorbed protein with increasing stability; (iii) the protein stability and the amount of protein desorbed upon washing with buffer, with an increased elutability of the adsorbed protein with increased stability. All of the above correlations could be explained by the rate of denaturation and the conformational state of the adsorbed protein. In conclusion, protein engineering for increased stability can be used as a strategy to decrease irreversible adsorption on surfaces at a liquid-solid interface.  相似文献   

12.
The problems of protein aggregation and protein misfolding in the cell are connected with the appearance of many genetic diseases. Both processes can be a consequence of substitutions of certain amino acid residues in proteins. The substitutions can influence the protein stability and protein folding rates in both the intermediate and the native states. We have studied equilibrium urea unfolding of mutant forms of apomyoglobin with substitutions of conserved nonfunctional residues by Ala to estimate their influence on protein stability. These residues include Val10, Trp14, Ilel11, Leu115, Met131 and Leu135. Conformational transitions were monitored by intrinsic Trp fluorescence and by circular dichroism spectra in the far UV region. Free energy changes upon the transition from the native to intermediate state and from the intermediate to unfolded state were determined. It was shown that all substitutions used lead to an appreciable decrease of the apomyoglobin native state stability, whereas the stability of the intermediate state is affected substantially smaller.  相似文献   

13.
The denatured states of alpha-lactalbumin, which have features of a molten globule state, have been studied to elucidate the energetics of the molten globule state and its contribution to the stability of the native conformation. Analysis of calorimetric and CD data shows that the heat capacity increment of alpha-lactalbumin denaturation highly correlates with the degree of disorder of the residual structure of the state. As a result, the denaturational transition of alpha-lactalbumin from the native to a highly ordered compact denatured state, and from the native to the disordered unfolded state are described by different thermodynamic functions. The enthalpy and entropy of the denaturation of alpha-lactalbumin to compact denatured state are always greater than the enthalpy and entropy of its unfolding. This difference represents the unfolding of the molten globule state. Calorimetric measurements of the heat effect associated with the unfolding of the molten globule state reveal that it is negative in sign over the temperature range of molten globule stability. This observation demonstrates the energetic specificity of the molten globule state, which, in contrast to a protein with unique tertiary structure, is stabilized by the dominance of negative entropy and enthalpy of hydration over the positive conformational entropy and enthalpy of internal interactions. It is concluded that at physiological temperatures the entropy of dehydration is the dominant factor providing stability for the compact intermediate state on the folding pathway, while for the stability of the native state, the conformational enthalpy is the dominant factor.  相似文献   

14.
Studies on the process of spontaneous protein folding into a unique native state are an important issue of molecular biology. Apomyoglobin from the sperm whale is a convenient model for these studies in vitro. Here, we present the results of equilibrium and kinetic experiments carried out in a study on the folding and unfolding of eight mutant apomyoglobin forms of with hydrophobic amino acid substitutions on the protein surface. Calculated values of apparent constants of folding/unfolding rates, as well as the data on equilibrium conformational transitions in the urea concentration range of 0–6 M at 11°C are given. Based on the obtained information on the kinetic properties of the studied proteins, a Φ-value analysis of the transition state has been performed and values of urea concentrations corresponding to the midpoint of the transition from the native to intermediate state have been determined for the given forms of mutant apomyoglobin. It has been found that a significant increase in the stability of the native state can be achieved by a small number of amino acid substitutions on the protein surface. It has been shown that the substitution of only one amino acid residue exclusively affects the height of the energy barrier that separates different states of apomyoglobin.  相似文献   

15.
Herberhold H  Royer CA  Winter R 《Biochemistry》2004,43(12):3336-3345
FT-IR spectroscopy was used to study the effects of various chaotropic and kosmotropic cosolvents (glycerol, sucrose, sorbitol, K(2)SO(4), CaCl(2), and urea) on the secondary structure and thermodynamic properties upon unfolding and denaturation of staphylococcal nuclease (Snase). The data show that the different cosolvents have a profound effect on the denaturation pressure and the Gibbs free energy (DeltaG(o)) and volume (DeltaV(o) change of unfolding. Moreover, by analysis of the amide I' infrared bands, conformational changes of the protein upon unfolding in the different cosolvents have been determined. An increase, a reduction, or an independence of the volume change of unfolding is observed, depending on the type of cosolvent, which can at least in part be attributed to the formation of a different unfolded state structure of the protein. The data are compared with the corresponding thermodynamic values of DeltaV(o) for the temperature-induced unfolding process of Snase as obtained by pressure perturbation calorimetry, and significant differences are observed and discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Mukaiyama A  Koga Y  Takano K  Kanaya S 《Proteins》2008,71(1):110-118
Proteins are known to be stabilized by naturally occurring osmolytes such as amino acids, sugars, and methylamines. Here, we examine the effect of trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) on the conformational stability of ribonuclease HII from a hyperthermophile, Thermococcus kodakaraensis (Tk-RNase HII), which inherently possesses high conformational stability. Heat- and guanidine hydrochloride-induced unfolding experiments demonstrated that the conformational stability of Tk-RNase HII in the presence of 0.5M TMAO was higher than that in the absence of TMAO at all examined temperatures. TMAO affected the unfolding and refolding kinetics of Tk-RNase HII to a similar extent. These results indicate that proteins are universally stabilized by osmolytes, regardless of their robustness, and suggest a stabilization mechanism by osmolytes, caused by the unfavorable interaction of osmolytes with protein backbones in the denatured state. Our results also imply that the basic protein folding principle is not dependent on protein stability and evolution.  相似文献   

17.
The structure of the first significant transition state on the unfolding pathway of barnase has been analysed in detail by protein engineering methods. Over 50 mutations placed strategically over the whole protein have been used as probes to report on the local structure in the transition state. Several different probes for many regions of the protein give consistent results as do multiple probes at the same site. The overall consistency of phi values indicates that the mutations have not produced changes in the protein that significantly alter the transition state for unfolding. A fine-structure analysis of interactions has also been conducted by removing different parts of the same side-chains. Many of the results of simple mutations fall nicely into the two clear-cut cases of phi = 1 or 0, indicating that the local noncovalent bonds are either fully broken or fully made in the transition state. Much of the structure of barnase in the transition state for unfolding is very similar to that in the folded protein. Both major alpha-helices fray at the N terminus. The last two turns in helix1 are certainly intact, as is the C terminus of helix2. The general picture of the beta-sheet is that the three central beta-strands are completely intact while the two edge beta-strands are mainly present but certainly weakened. The first five residues of the protein unwind but the C terminus remains folded. Three of the five loops are unfolded. The edges of the main hydrophobic core (core1) are significantly weakened, however, and their breaking appears partly rate determining. The centre of the small hydrophobic core3 remains intact. Core2 is completely disrupted. The first events in unfolding are thus: the unfolding of several loops, the unwinding of the helices from the N termini, and the weakening and disruption of the hydrophobic cores. The values of phi are found to be substantially the same under conditions that favour folding as under conditions that are highly denaturing, and so the structure of the unfolding transition state is substantially the same in water as in the presence of denaturant. The structure of the final kinetically significant transition state for refolding is identical to that for unfolding. The final events in refolding are, accordingly, the consolidation of the hydrophobic cores, the closing of many loops and the capping of the N termini of the helices.  相似文献   

18.
In globular proteins, there are intermolecular hydrogen bonds between protein and water molecules, and between water molecules, which are bound with the proteins, in addition to intramolecular hydrogen bonds. To estimate the contribution of these hydrogen bonds to the conformational stability of a protein, the thermodynamic parameters for denaturation and the crystal structures of five Thr to Val and five Thr to Ala mutant human lysozymes were determined. The denaturation Gibbs energy (DeltaG) of Thr to Val and Thr to Ala mutant proteins was changed from 4.0 to -5.6 kJ/mol and from 1.6 to -6.3 kJ/mol, respectively, compared with that of the wild-type protein. The contribution of hydrogen bonds to the stability (DeltaDeltaG(HB)) of the Thr and other mutant human lysozymes previously reported was extracted from the observed stability changes (DeltaDeltaG) with correction for changes in hydrophobicity and side chain conformational entropy between the wild-type and mutant structures. The estimation of the DeltaDeltaG(HB) values of all mutant proteins after removal of hydrogen bonds, including protein-water hydrogen bonds, indicates a favorable contribution of the intra- and intermolecular hydrogen bonds to the protein stability. The net contribution of an intramolecular hydrogen bond (DeltaG(HB[pp])), an intermolecular one between protein and ordered water molecules (DeltaG(HB[pw])), and an intermolecular one between ordered water molecules (DeltaG(HB[ww])) could be estimated to be 8. 5, 5.2, and 5.0 kJ/mol, respectively, for a 3 A long hydrogen bond. This result shows the different contributions to protein stability of intra- and intermolecular hydrogen bonds. The entropic cost due to the introduction of a water molecule (DeltaG(H)()2(O)) could be also estimated to be about 8 kJ/mol.  相似文献   

19.
Duy C  Fitter J 《Biophysical journal》2006,90(10):3704-3711
In a case study on five homologous alpha-amylases we analyzed the properties of unfolded states as obtained from treatments with GndHCl and with elevated temperatures. In particular the wavelength of the tryptophan fluorescence emission peak (lambda(max)) is a valuable parameter to characterize properties of the unfolded state. In all cases with a typical red shift of the emission spectrum occurring during structural unfolding we observed a larger magnitude of this shift for GndHCl-induced unfolding as compared to thermal unfolding. Although a quantitative relation between aggregation and reduction of the unfolding induced red shifts cannot be given, our data indicate that protein aggregation contributes significantly to smaller magnitudes of red shifts as observed during thermal unfolding. In addition, other properties of the unfolded states, most probable structural compactness or simply differences in the conformational scrambling, also affect the magnitude of red shifts. For the irreversible unfolding alpha-amylases studied here, transition temperatures and magnitudes of red shifts are strongly depending on heating rates. Lower protein concentrations and smaller heating rates lead to larger red shifts upon thermal unfolding, indicating that under these conditions the protein aggregation is less pronounced.  相似文献   

20.
Dubey VK  Jagannadham MV 《Biochemistry》2003,42(42):12287-12297
The structural and functional aspects along with equilibrium unfolding of procerain, a cysteine protease from Calotropis procera, were studied in solution. The energetic parameters and conformational stability of procerain in different states were also estimated and interpreted. Procerain belongs to the alpha + beta class of proteins. At pH 2.0, procerain exists in a partially unfolded state with characteristics of a molten globule-like state, and the protein is predominantly a beta-sheet conformation and exhibits strong ANS binding. GuHCl and temperature denaturation of procerain in the molten globule-like state is noncooperative, contrary to the cooperativity seen with the native protein, suggesting the presence of two parts in the molecular structure of procerain, possibly domains, with different stability that unfolds in steps. Moreover, tryptophan quenching studies suggested the exposure of aromatic residues to solvent in this state. At lower pH, procerain unfolds to the acid-unfolded state, and a further decrease in the pH drives the protein to the A state. The presence of 0.5 M salt in the solvent composition directs the transition to the A state while bypassing the acid-unfolded state. GuHCl-induced unfolding of procerain at pH 3.0 seen by various methods is cooperative, but the transitions are noncoincidental. Besides, a strong ANS binding to the protein is observed at low concentrations of GuHCl, indicating the presence of an intermediate in the unfolding pathway. On the other hand, even in the presence of urea (8 M), procerain retains all the activity as well as structural parameters at neutral pH. However, the protein is susceptible to unfolding by urea at lower pH, and the transitions are cooperative and coincidental. Further, the properties of the molten globule-like state and the intermediate state are different, but both states have the same conformational stability. This indicates that these intermediates may be located on parallel folding routes of procerain.  相似文献   

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