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 15 毫秒
1.
The study of guanidine-HCl or thermal denaturation of diferric ovotransferrin (Fe2Tf) has revealed a simultaneous unfolding of the two domains of the protein (Ikeda et al. (1985) FEBS Lett. 182, 305-309). In urea denaturation of Fe2Tf, however, two distinct steps of unfolding were observed in the urea concentration range from 4.5 to 9 M at pH 8.0 and 37 degrees C by measuring the residual iron-bound protein (absorbance at 465 nm) and the remaining folded structures (circular dichroism at 222 nm). From a study of urea denaturation of partially iron-saturated Tf whose iron preferentially occupied the N-domain, it was found that the first and the second steps of denaturation corresponded to those of the N-terminal (4.5-6 M urea) and C-terminal domains (over 7 M urea), respectively. The N-domain of Fe2Tf was selectively unfolded in 7 M urea and digested with trypsin to provide an iron-bound C-terminal fragment (42 kDa) in good yield (about 80% of theoretical). The kinetic analysis of the decrease in A465 of Fe2Tf in 9 M urea showed that the N-domain unfolded 3 x 10(2) times faster than the C-domain. With partially iron-saturated Tf, the decrease of A465 in 9 M urea also proceeded in a biphasic manner and the ratio, the decrement in A465 of the rapid phase/the decrement in A465 of the slow phase, gave the value of iron distribution as Fe at the N-site/Fe at the C-site.  相似文献   

2.
Two mechanisms have been proposed for the thermal unfolding of ribonuclease S (RNase S). The first is a sequential partial unfolding of the S peptide/S protein complex followed by dissociation, whereas the second is a concerted denaturation/dissociation. The thermal denaturation of ribonuclease S and its fragment, the S protein, were followed with circular dichroism and infrared spectra. These spectra were analyzed by the principal component method of factor analysis. The use of multiple spectral techniques and of factor analysis monitored different aspects of the denaturation simultaneously. The unfolding pathway was compared with that of the parent enzyme ribonuclease A (RNase A), and a model was devised to assess the importance of the dissociation in the unfolding. The unfolding patterns obtained from the melting curves of each protein imply the existence of multiple intermediate states and/or processes. Our data provide evidence that the pretransition in the unfolding of ribonuclease S is due to partial unfolding of the S protein/S peptide complex and that the dissociation occurs at higher temperature. Our observations are consistent with a sequential denaturation mechanism in which at least one partial unfolding step comes before the main conformational transition, which is instead a concerted, final unfolding/dissociation step.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of methylurea, N,N'-dimethylurea, ethylurea, and butylurea as well as guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl), urea and pH on the thermal stability, structural properties, and preferential solvation changes accompanying the thermal unfolding of ribonuclease A (RNase A) has been investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), UV, and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. The results show that the thermal stability of RNase A decreases with increasing concentration of denaturants and the size of the hydrophobic group substituted on the urea molecule. From CD measurements in the near- and far-UV range, it has been observed that the tertiary structure of RNase A melts at about 3 degrees C lower temperature than its secondary structure, which means that the hierarchy in structural building blocks exists for RNase A even at conditions at which according to DSC and UV measurements the RNase A unfolding can be interpreted in terms of a two-state approximation. The far-UV CD spectra also show that the final denatured states of RNase A at high temperatures in the presence of different denaturants including 4.5 M GuHCl are similar to each other but different from the one obtained in 4.5 M GuHCl at 25 degrees C. The concentration dependence of the preferential solvation change delta r23, expressed as the number of cosolvent molecules entering or leaving the solvation shell of the protein upon denaturation and calculated from DSC data, shows the same relative denaturation efficiency of alkylureas as other methods.  相似文献   

4.
Ervatamin A, a cysteine proteases from Ervatamia coronaria, has been used as model system to examine structure-function relationship by equilibrium unfolding methods. Ervatamin A belongs to alpha+beta class of proteins and exhibit stability towards temperature and chemical denaturants. Acid induced unfolding of ervatamin A was incomplete with respect to the structural content of the enzyme. Between pH 0.5 and 2.0, the enzyme is predominantly in beta-sheet conformation and shows a strong ANS binding suggesting the existence of a partially unfolded intermediate state (I(A) state). Surprisingly, high concentrations of GuHCl required to unfold this state and the transition mid points GuHCl induced unfolding curves are significantly higher. GuHCl induced unfolding of ervatamin A at pH 3.0 as well as at pH 4.0 is complex and cannot be satisfactorily fit to a two-state model for unfolding. Besides, a strong ANS binding to the protein is observed at low concentration of GuHCl, indicating the presence of intermediate in the unfolding pathway. On the other hand, even in the presence of urea (8M) the enzyme retains all the activity as well as structural parameters at neutral pH. However, the protein is susceptible to urea unfolding at pH 3.0 and below. Urea induced unfolding of ervatamin A at pH 3.0 is cooperative and the transitions curves obtained by different probes are and non-coincidental. Temperature denaturation of ervatamin A in I(A) state is non-cooperative, contrary to the cooperativity seen with native protein, suggesting the presence of two parts in the molecular structure of ervatamin A may be domains, with different stability that unfolds in steps. Careful inspection of biophysical properties of intermediate states populated in urea and GuHCl (I(UG) state) induced unfolding suggests all these three intermediates are identical and populated in different conditions. However, the properties of the intermediate (I(A) state) identified at pH approximately 1.5 are different from those of the I(UG) state.  相似文献   

5.
Although denaturation of ribonuclease by guanidine hydrochloride to a random coil has been considered to be a simple two-state mechanism, the time dependence of our calorimetric data indicate that a cooperative endothermic pretransition may occur near 1.25 M. guanidine hydrochloride (pH 6 and 25°C) without gross unfolding of the protein. Reexamination of other observables as a function of guanidine hydrochloride concentrations as well as activity measurements suggests the possibility of some process other than simple binding occurring in the concentration range below the onset of gross denaturation.  相似文献   

6.
Thermodynamic nonideality arising from the space-filling effect of added sucrose is employed to confirm that the reversible unfolding of ribonuclease A effected by acid may be described as an equilibrium between native and unfolded states of the enzyme. However, the extent of the volume change is far too small for the larger isomer to be the fully expanded state, a result signifying that the acid-mediated unfolding of ribonuclease does not conform with the two-state equilibrium model of protein denaturation. Although the thermal denaturation of ribonuclease A is characterized by a larger increase in volume, quantitative reappraisal of published results on the effects of glycerol on this transition at pH 2.8 (Gekko, K., and Timasheff, S. N., 1981 Biochemistry 20, 4677-4686) leads to an estimated volume increase that is much smaller than that inferred from hydrodynamic studies--a disparity attributed to the dual actions of glycerol as a space-filling solute and as a ligand that binds preferentially to the thermally unfolded form of the enzyme. Even in this unfavorable circumstance the fact that glycerol exerts a net excluded volume effect at least confirms that the thermal unfolding of ribonuclease A is an equilibrium transition between two discrete states. The strengths and limitations of using thermodynamic nonideality as a probe of the two-state equilibrium model of protein denaturation are discussed in the light of these findings.  相似文献   

7.
Hisactophilin is a histidine-rich pH-dependent actin-binding protein from Dictyostelium discoideum. The structure of hisactophilin is typical of the beta-trefoil fold, a common structure adopted by diverse proteins with unrelated primary sequences and functions. The thermodynamics of denaturation of hisactophilin have been measured using fluorescence- and CD-monitored equilibrium urea denaturation curves, pH-denaturation, and thermal denaturation curves, as well as differential scanning calorimetry. Urea denaturation is reversible from pH 5.7 to pH 9.7; however, thermal denaturation is highly reversible only below pH approximately 6.2. Reversible denaturation by urea and heat is well fit using a two-state transition between the native and the denatured states. Urea denaturation curves are best fit using a quadratic dependence of the Gibbs free energy of unfolding upon urea concentration. Hisactophilin has moderate, roughly constant stability from pH 7.7 to pH 9.7; however, below pH 7.7, stability decreases markedly, most likely due to protonation of histidine residues. Enthalpic effects of histidine ionization upon unfolding also appear to be involved in the occurrence of cold unfolding of hisactophilin under relatively mild solution conditions. The stability data for hisactophilin are compared with data on hisactophilin function, and with data for two other beta-trefoil proteins, human interleukin-1beta, and basic fibroblast growth factor.  相似文献   

8.
The method of limited proteolysis has proven to be appropriate for the determination of unfolding rate constants (k(U)) of ribonuclease A in the transition region of thermal denaturation [Arnold, U. & Ulbrich-Hofmann, R. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 2166-2172]. The aim of the present paper was to extend this procedure to the pretransition region of thermally and urea-induced denaturation where spectroscopic methods do not allow direct measurement of k(U). The results show that the approach can be applied successfully to denaturing (free energy of unfolding Delta G < 10 kJ.mol(-1)) and to marginally native conditions (Delta G = 10-25 kJ.mol(-1)). Under moderately (Delta G = 25-30 kJ.mol(-1)) and strongly native conditions (Delta G > 30 kJ.mol(-1)), however, the determination of kU was not possible in this way as the proteolytic degradation of ribonuclease A by thermolysin or trypsin was no longer determined by global unfolding. Here, proteolysis proceeds via the native RNase A. In the presence of low concentrations of urea, the rate constants of proteolysis were, surprisingly, smaller than in the absence of urea. As the protease activity has been taken into account, this result points to a local stabilization of the RNase A molecule.  相似文献   

9.
The change in heat capacity deltaCp for the folding of ribonuclease A was determined using differential scanning calorimetry and thermal denaturation curves. The methods gave equivalent results, deltaCp = 1.15+/-0.08 kcal mol(-1) K(-1). Estimates of the conformational stability of ribonuclease A based on these results from thermal unfolding are in good agreement with estimates from urea unfolding analyzed using the linear extrapolation method.  相似文献   

10.
The equilibrium unfolding of the major Physa acuta glutathione transferase isoenzyme (P. acuta GST(3)) has been performed using guanidinium chloride (GdmCl), urea, and acid denaturation to investigate the unfolding intermediates. Protein transitions were monitored by intrinsic fluorescence. The results indicate that unfolding of P. acuta GST(3) using GdmCl (0-3.0M) is a multistep process, i.e., three intermediates coexist in equilibrium. The first intermediate, a partially dissociated dimer, exists at low GdmCl concentration (approximately at 0.7M). At 1.2M GdmCl, a dimeric intermediate with a compact structure was observed. This intermediate undergoes dissociation into structural monomers at 1.75M of GdmCl. The monomeric intermediate started to be completely unfolding at higher GdmCl concentrations (>1.8M). Unfolding using urea (0-7.0M) and acid-induced structures as well as the fluorescence of 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate in the presence of different GdmCl concentrations confirmed that the unfolding is a multistep process. At concentrations of GdmCl or urea less than the midpoints or at the midpoint pH (pH 4.2-4.6), the unfolding transition is protein concentration independent and involved a change in the subunit tertiary structure yielding a partially active dimeric intermediate. The binding of glutathione to the enzyme active site stabilizes the native dimeric state.  相似文献   

11.
Molecular dynamics simulations of a ribonuclease A C-peptide analog and a sequence variant were performed in water at 277 and 300 K and in 8 M urea to clarify the molecular denaturation mechanism induced by urea and the early events in protein unfolding. Spectroscopic characterization of the peptides showed that the C-peptide analog had a high alpha-helical content, which was not the case for the variant. In the simulations, interdependent side-chain interactions were responsible for the high stability of the alpha-helical C-peptide analog in the different solvents. The other peptide displayed alpha-helical unwinding that propagated cooperatively toward the N-terminal. The conformations sampled by the peptides depended on their sequence and on the solvent. The ability of water molecules to form hydrogen bonds to the peptide as well as the hydrogen bond lifetimes increased in the presence of urea, whereas water mobility was reduced near the peptide. Urea accumulated in excess around the peptide, to which it formed long-lived hydrogen bonds. The unfolding mechanisms induced by thermal denaturation and by urea are of a different nature, with urea-aqueous solutions providing a better peptide solvation than pure water. Our results suggest that the effect of urea on the chemical denaturation process involves both the direct and indirect mechanisms.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Ribonuclease A contains two exposed loop regions, around Ala20 and Asn34. Only the loop around Ala20 is sufficiently flexible even under native conditions to allow cleavage by nonspecific proteases. In contrast, the loop around Asn34 (together with the adjacent beta-sheet around Thr45) is the first region of the ribonuclease A molecule that becomes susceptible to thermolysin and trypsin under unfolding conditions. This second region therefore has been suggested to be involved in early steps of unfolding and was designated as the unfolding region of the ribonuclease A molecule. Consequently, modifications in this region should have a great impact on the unfolding and, thus, on the thermodynamic stability. Also, if the Ala20 loop contributes to the stability of the ribonuclease A molecule, rigidification of this flexible region should stabilize the entire protein molecule. We substituted several residues in both regions without any dramatic effects on the native conformation and catalytic activity. As a result of their remarkably differing stability, the variants fell into two groups carrying the mutations: (a) A20P, S21P, A20P/S21P, S21L, or N34D; (b) L35S, L35A, F46Y, K31A/R33S, L35S/F46Y, L35A/F46Y, or K31A/R33S/F46Y. The first group showed a thermodynamic and kinetic stability similar to wild-type ribonuclease A, whereas both stabilities of the variants in the second group were greatly decreased, suggesting that the decrease in DeltaG can be mainly attributed to an increased unfolding rate. Although rigidification of the Ala20 loop by introduction of proline did not result in stabilization, disturbance of the network of hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions that interlock the proposed unfolding region dramatically destabilized the ribonuclease A molecule.  相似文献   

14.
To investigate the pH dependence of the conformational stability of barnase, urea denaturation curves were determined over the pH range 2-10. The maximum conformational stability of barnase is 9 kcal mol-1 and occurs between pH 5 and 6. The dependence of delta G on urea concentration increases from 1850 cal mol-1 M-1 at high pH to about 3000 cal mol-1 M-1 near pH 3. This suggests that the unfolded conformations of barnase become more accessible to urea as the net charge on the molecule increases. Previous studies suggested that in 8 M urea barnase unfolds more completely than ribonuclease T1, even with the disulfide bonds broken [Pace, C.N., Laurents, D. V., & Thomson, J.A. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2564-2572]. In support of this, solvent perturbation difference spectroscopy showed that in 8 M urea the Trp and Tyr residues in barnase are more accessible to perturbation by dimethyl sulfoxide than in ribonuclease T1 with the disulfide bonds broken.  相似文献   

15.
UDP-galactose 4-epimerase from yeast (Kluyveromyces fragilis) is a homodimer of total molecular mass 150 kDa having possibly one mole of NAD/dimer acting as a cofactor. The molecule could be dissociated and denatured by 8 M urea at pH 7.0 and could be functionally reconstituted after dilution with buffer having extraneous NAD. The unfolded and refolded equilibrium intermediates of the enzyme between 0-8 M urea have been characterized in terms of catalytic activity, NADH like characteristic coenzyme fluorescence, interaction with extrinsic fluorescence probe 1-anilino 8-naphthelene sulphonic acid (ANS), far UV circular dichroism spectra, fluorescence emission spectra of aromatic residues and subunit dissociation. While denaturation monitored by parameters associated with active site region e.g. inactivation and coenzyme fluorescence, were found to be cooperative having delta G between -8.8 to -4.4 kcals/mole, the overall denaturation process in terms of secondary and tertiary structure was however continuous without having a transition point. At 3 M urea a stable dimeric apoenzyme was formed having 65% of native secondary structure which was dissociated to monomer at 6 M urea with 12% of the said structure. The unfolding and refolding pathways involved identical structures except near the final stage of refolding where catalytic activity reappeared.  相似文献   

16.
Circular dichroism was used to monitor the thermal unfolding of ribonuclease A in 50% aqueous methanol. The spectrum of the protein at temperatures below -10 degrees C (pH* 3.0) was essentially identical to that of native ribonuclease A in aqueous solution. The spectrum of the thermally denatured material above 70 degrees C revealed some residual secondary structure in comparison to protein unfolded by 5 M Gdn.HCl at 70 degrees C in the presence or absence of methanol. The spectra as a function of temperature were deconvoluted to determine the contributions of different types of secondary structure. The position of the thermal unfolding transition as monitored by alpha-helix, with a midpoint at 38 degrees C, was at a much higher temperature than that monitored by beta-sheet, 26 degrees C, which also corresponded to that observed by delta A286, tyrosine fluorescence and hydrodynamic radius (from light scattering measurements). Thus, the loss of beta-sheet structure is decoupled from that of alpha-helix, suggesting a step-wise unfolding of the protein. The transition observed for loss of alpha-helix coincides with the previously measured transition for His-12 by NMR from a partially folded state to the unfolded state, suggesting that the unfolding of the N-terminal helix in RNase A is lost after unfolding of the core beta-sheet during thermal denaturation. The thermally denatured protein was relatively compact, as measured by dynamic light scattering.  相似文献   

17.
The subunit structure, dissociation, and unfolding of the hemoglobin of the earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris, were investigated by light scattering molecular weight methods and changes in optical rotatory dispersion (at 233 nm) and absorption in the Soret region. Urea and the alkylureas, methyl-, ethyl-, propyl-, and butylurea, were employed as the reagents to cause both dissociation and unfolding of the protein. Analysis of the light scattering data suggests that the dissociation patterns as a function of hemoglobin concentration in the various dissociating solvents can be described in quantitative terms, either as an equilibrium mixture consisting of parent duodecamers and hexamers of 3 x 10(6) and 1.5 x 10(6) molecular weight (in 1-3 M urea, 1-2 M methyl- and ethylurea, and 1 M propylurea), as a mixture of hexamers and monomers, the latter with a molecular weight of 250000 (i.e., in 4 M urea), or as a mixture of all three species of duodecamers, hexamers, and monomers, seen in 2 M propylurea. Parallel studies by optical rotation and absorption measurements indicate that there is little or no unfolding of the subunits at urea and alkylurea concentrations where complete dissociation to hexamers and extensive dissociation to monomers can be achieved. Further splitting of the monomers (A subunits) to smaller fragments of one-third to one-quarter of the molecular weight of the monomers (B subunits) is seen in the presence of 7 and 8 M urea (pH 7) and in alkaline urea to propylurea solutions. Analysis of the dissociation data of duodecamers to monomers, based on equations used in studies of the urea and amide dissociation of human hemoglobin A from our laboratory, suggests few urea and alkylurea binding sites at the areas of hexamer contacts in the associated duodecameric form of L. terrestris hemoglobin. This suggests that hydrophobic interactions are not the dominant forces that govern the state of association of L. terrestris hemoglobin relative to polar and ionic interactions. The unfolding effects of the ureas, at concentrations above the dissociation transitions, are closely similar to their effects on other globular proteins, suggesting that hydrophobic interactions play an important role in the maintenance of the folded conformation of the subunits. Use of the Peller-Flory equation, with binding constants based on free energy transfer data of hydrophobic amino acid side chains and denaturation data used in previous denaturation studies, gave a relatively good acount of the observed denaturation midpoints obtained with the various ureas supporting these conclusions.  相似文献   

18.
The human serum albumin is known to undergo N <==> F (neutral to fast moving) isomerization between pH 7 and 3.5. The N < ==> F isomerization involves unfolding and separation of domain III from rest of the molecule. The urea denaturation of N isomer of HSA shows two step three state transition with accumulation of an intermediate state around 4.8-5.2 M urea concentration. While urea induced unfolding transition of F isomer of HSA does not show the intermediate state observed during unfolding of N isomer. Therefore, it provides direct evidence that the formation of intermediate in the unfolding transition of HSA involves unfolding of domain III. Although urea induced unfolding of F isomer of HSA appears to be an one step process, but no coincidence between the equilibrium transitions monitored by tryptophanyl fluorescence, tyrosyl fluorescence, far-UV CD and near-UV CD spectroscopic techniques provides decisive evidence that unfolding of F isomer of HSA is not a two state process. An intermediate state that retained significant amount of secondary structure but no tertiary structure has been identified (around 4.4 M urea) in the unfolding pathway of F isomer. The emission of Trp-214 (located in domain II) and its mode of quenching by acrylamide and binding of chloroform indicate that unfolding of F isomer start from domain II (from 0.4 M urea). But at higher urea concentration (above 1.6 M) both the domain unfold simultaneously and the protein acquire random coil structure around 8.0 M urea. Further much higher KSV of NATA (17.2) than completely denatured F isomer (5.45) of HSA (8.0 M urea) suggests the existence of residual tertiary contacts within local regions in random coil conformation (probably around lone Trp-214).  相似文献   

19.
Pedroso I  Irún MP  Machicado C  Sancho J 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):9873-9884
The conformational stability of a single-chain Fv antibody fragment against a hepatitis B surface antigen (anti-HBsAg scFv) has been studied by urea and temperature denaturation followed by fluorescence and circular dichroism. At neutral pH and low protein concentration, it is a well-folded monomer, and its urea and thermal denaturations are reversible. The noncoincidence of the fluorescence and circular dichroism transitions indicates the accumulation in the urea denaturation of an intermediate (I(1)) not previously described in scFv molecules. In addition, at higher urea concentrations, a red-shift in the fluorescence emission maximum reveals an additional intermediate (I(2)), already reported in the denaturation of other scFvs. The urea equilibrium unfolding of the anti-HBsAg scFv is thus four-state. A similar four-state behavior is observed in the thermal unfolding although the intermediates involved are not identical to those found in the urea denaturation. Global analysis of the thermal unfolding data suggests that the first intermediate displays substantial secondary structure and some well-defined tertiary interactions while the second one lacks well-defined tertiary interactions but is compact and unfolds at higher temperature in a noncooperative fashion. Global analysis of the urea unfolding data (together with the modeled structure of the scFv) provides insights into the conformation of the chemical denaturation intermediates and allows calculation of the N-I(1), I(1)-I(2), and I(2)-D free energy differences. Interestingly, although the N-D free energy difference is very large, the N-I(1) one, representing the "relevant" conformational stability of the scFv, is small.  相似文献   

20.
The conformational changes in the thermal denaturation of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A was followed with infrared spectra and analyzed by second derivative and two-dimensional correlation techniques. By analyzing the sequential events in each transition stage, the results were consistent with a step-wise thermal denaturation mechanism in which the structural adjustment of the N-terminal and the opening of the central structure of the protein come before the main unfolding process. Non-native turns were found to form along with the unfolding of the native structures. The central region that is composed of some beta-sheet and alpha-helical structures was found to be the most stable part that might form the residual structure at high temperatures.  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