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1.
Mammalian glutathione (GSH) transferases are dimeric proteins, many of which share a common hydrophobic interaction motif that is important for dimer stability. In the rGSTM1-1 enzyme this motif involves the side chain of F56, located on the 56 loop of the N-terminal domain, which is intercalated between the alpha4- and alpha5-helices of the C-terminal domain of the opposing subnuit. Disruption of the complementary interactions in this motif by mutation of F56 to serine, arginine, or glutamate is known to have deleterious effects on catalytic efficiency but remarkably different effects on the stability of the dimer [Hornby et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 14238-14247]. The structural basis for the behavior of the mutants by amide H/D exchange mass spectrometry is described. A substantial decrease in H/D exchange is observed in the GSH binding domain and in parts of the dimer interface upon substrate binding. The F56S and F56R mutants exhibit enhanced H/D exchange kinetics in the GSH binding domain and at the dimer interface. In contrast, the F56E mutant shows a decrease in the rate and extent of amide H/D exchange at the dimer interface and enhanced exchange kinetics in the GSH binding domain. The results suggest that the F56E mutant has a restructured dimer interface with decreased solvent accessibility and dynamics. Although all of the F56 mutations disrupt the GSH binding site, the effects of the mutations on the structure of the subunit interface and dimer stability are quite distinct.  相似文献   

2.
Canonical glutathione (GSH) transferases are dimeric proteins with subunits composed of an N-terminal GSH binding region (domain 1) and a C-terminal helical region (domain 2). The stabilities of several GSH transferase dimers are dependent upon two groups of interactions between domains 1 and 2 of opposing subunits: a hydrophobic ball-and-socket motif and a buried charge cluster motif. In rGSTM1-1, these motifs involve residues F56 and R81, respectively. The structural basis for the effects of mutating F56 to different residues on dimer stability and function has been reported (Codreanu et al. (2005) Biochemistry 44, 10605-10612). Here, we show that the simultaneous disruption of both motifs in the F56S/R81A mutant causes complete dissociation of the dimer to a monomeric protein on the basis of gel filtration chromatography and multiple-angle laser light scattering. The fluorescence and far-UV CD properties of the double mutant as well as the kinetics of amide H/D exchange along the polypeptide backbone suggest that the monomer has a globular structure that is similar to a single subunit in the native protein. However, the mutant monomer has severely impaired catalytic activity, suggesting that the dimer interface is vital for efficient catalysis. Backbone amide H/D exchange kinetics in the F56S and F56S/R81A mutants indicate that a reorganization of the loop structure between helix alpha2 and strand beta3 near the active site is responsible for the decreased catalytic activity of the monomer. In addition, the junction between the alpha4 and alpha5 helices in F56S/R81R shows decreased H/D exchange, indicating another structural change that may affect catalysis. Although the native subunit interface is important for dimer stability, urea-induced unfolding of the F56S/R81A mutant suggests that the interface is not essential for the thermodynamic stability of individual subunits. The H/D exchange data reveal a possible molecular basis for the folding cooperativity observed between domains 1 and 2.  相似文献   

3.
Immunoglobulin binding domain B1 of streptococcal protein G (GB1), a small (56 residues), stable, single domain protein, is one of the most extensively used model systems in the area of protein folding and design. The recently determined NMR structure of a quadruple mutant (HS#124F26A, L5V/F30V/Y33F/A34F) revealed a domain-swapped dimer that dissociated into a partially folded, monomeric species at low micromolar protein concentrations. Here, we have characterized this monomeric, partially folded species by NMR and show that extensive conformational heterogeneity for a substantial portion of the polypeptide chain exists. Exchange between the conformers within the monomer ensemble on the microsecond to millisecond timescale renders the majority of backbone amide resonances broadened beyond detection. Despite these extensive temporal and spatial fluctuations, the overall architecture of the monomeric mutant protein resembles that of wild-type GB1 and not the monomer unit of the domain-swapped dimer.  相似文献   

4.
Tetramerization of the human p53 tumor suppressor protein is required for its biological functions. However, cellular levels of p53 indicate that it exists predominantly in a monomeric state. Since the oligomerization of p53 involves the rate-limiting formation of a primary dimer intermediate, we engineered a covalently linked pair of human p53 tetramerization (p53tet) domains to generate a tandem dimer (p53tetTD) that minimizes the energetic requirements for forming the primary dimer. We demonstrate that p53tetTD self-assembles into an oligomeric structure equivalent to the wild-type p53tet tetramer and exhibits dramatically enhanced oligomeric stability. Specifically, the p53tetTD dimer exhibits an unfolding/dissociation equilibrium constant of 26 fM at 37 degrees C, or a million-fold increase in stability relative to the wild-type p53tet tetramer, and resists subunit exchange with monomeric p53tet. In addition, whereas the wild-type p53tet tetramer undergoes coupled (i.e. two-state) dissociation/unfolding to unfolded monomers, the p53tetTD dimer denatures via an intermediate that is detectable by differential scanning calorimetry but not CD spectroscopy, consistent with a folded p53tetTD monomer that is equivalent to the p53tet primary dimer. Given its oligomeric stability and resistance against hetero-oligomerization, dimerization of p53 constructs incorporating the tetramerization domain may yield functional constructs that may resist exchange with wild-type or mutant forms of p53.  相似文献   

5.
In mesophiles, triosephosphate isomerase (TIM) is an obligated homodimer. We have previously shown that monomeric folding intermediates are common in the chemical unfolding of TIM, where dissociation provides 75% of the overall conformational stability of the dimer. However, analysis of the crystallographic structure shows that, during unfolding, intermonomeric contacts contribute to only 5% of the overall increase in accessible surface area. In this work several methodologies were used to characterize the thermal dissociation and unfolding of the TIM from Entamoeba histolytica (EhTIM) and a monomeric variant obtained by chemical derivatization (mEhTIM). During EhTIM unfolding, sequential transitions corresponding to dimer dissociation into a compact monomeric intermediate followed by unfolding and further aggregation of the intermediate occurred. In the case of mEhTIM, a single transition, analogous to the second transition of EhTIM, was observed. Calorimetric, spectroscopic, hydrodynamic, and functional evidence shows that dimer dissociation is not restricted to localized interface reorganization. Dissociation represents 55% (DeltaH(Diss) = 146.8 kcal mol(-1)) of the total enthalpy change (DeltaH(Tot) = 266 kcal mol(-1)), indicating that this process is linked to substantial unfolding. We propose that, rather than a rigid body process, subunit assembly is best represented by a fly-casting mechanism. In TIM, catalysis is restricted to the dimer; therefore, the interface can be viewed as the final nucleation motif that directs assembly, folding, and function.  相似文献   

6.
Rat micro class glutathione transferases M1-1 and M2-2 are homodimers that share a 78% sequence identity but display differences in stability. M1-1 is more stable at the secondary and tertiary structural levels, whereas its quaternary structure is less stable. Each subunit in these proteins consists of two structurally distinct domains with intersubunit contacts occurring between domain 1 of one subunit and domain 2 of the other subunit. The chimeric subunit variants M(12), which has domain 1 of M1 and domain 2 of M2, and its complement M(21), were used to investigate the conformational stability of the chimeric homodimers M(12)-(12) and M(21)-(21) to determine the contribution of each domain toward stability. Exchanging entire domains between class micro GSTs is accommodated by the GST fold. Urea-induced equilibrium unfolding data indicate that whereas the class micro equilibrium unfolding mechanism (i.e., N(2) <--> 2I <--> 2U) is not altered, domain exchanges impact significantly on the conformational stability of the native dimers and monomeric folding intermediates. Data for the wild-type and chimeric proteins indicate that the order of stability for the native dimer (N(2)) is M2-2 > M(12)-(12) M1-1 approximately M(21)-(21), and that the order of stability of the monomeric intermediate (I) is M1 > M2 approximately M(12) > M(21). Interactions involving Arg 77, which is topologically conserved in GSTs, appear to play an important role in the stability of both the native dimeric and folding monomeric structures.  相似文献   

7.
Baez M  Wilson CA  Babul J 《FEBS letters》2011,585(14):2158-2164
Phosphofructokinase-2 is a 66 kD homodimer whose subunits are associated by means of a bimolecular domain, the β-clasp, which is linked to the larger portion of each subunit by a reentrant chain topology. To investigate how this structural organization determines the folding pathway of Pfk-2, unfolding and folding kinetic experiments were performed. The folding pathway shows an unstructured monomeric intermediate and that most part of the dimer structure is reached as a slow concerted folding/association step with a quite folded transition state in terms of solvent exposure. Unfolding kinetics show a transient intermediate, probably a partially unfolded dimer. We propose that these characteristics arise by a mutual constrain between the large domain and the β-clasp domain imposed by their interrupted chain connectivity.  相似文献   

8.
Spontaneous mutations at numerous sites distant from the active site of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease enable resistance to inhibitors while retaining enzymatic activity. As a benchmark for probing the effects of these mutations on the conformational adaptability of this dimeric β-barrel protein, the folding free-energy surface of a pseudo-wild-type variant, HIV-PR?, was determined by a combination of equilibrium and kinetic experiments on the urea-induced unfolding/refolding reactions. The equilibrium unfolding reaction was well described by a two-state model involving only the native dimeric form and the unfolded monomer. The global analysis of the kinetic folding mechanism reveals the presence of a fully folded monomeric intermediate that associates to form the native dimeric structure. Independent analysis of a stable monomeric version of the protease demonstrated that a small-amplitude fluorescence phase in refolding and unfolding, not included in the global analysis of the dimeric protein, reflects the presence of a transient intermediate in the monomer folding reaction. The partially folded and fully folded monomers are only marginally stable with respect to the unfolded state, and the dimerization reaction provides a modest driving force at micromolar concentrations of protein. The thermodynamic properties of this system are such that mutations can readily shift the equilibrium from the dimeric native state towards weakly folded states that have a lower affinity for inhibitors but that could be induced to bind to their target proteolytic sites. Presumably, subsequent secondary mutations increase the stability of the native dimeric state in these variants and, thereby, optimize the catalytic properties of the resistant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease.  相似文献   

9.
Immunoglobulin-binding domain B1 of streptococcal protein G (GB1), a small (56 residues), stable, single-domain protein, is one of the most extensively used model systems in the area of protein folding and design. Recently, NMR and X-ray structures of a quintuple GB1 core mutant (L5V/A26F/F30V/Y33F/A34F) that showed an unexpected, intertwined tetrameric architecture were determined. Here, we report the NMR structure of another mutant, derived from the tetramer by reverting the single amino acid position F26 back to the wild-type sequence A26. The structure reveals a domain-swapped dimer that involves exchange of the second beta-hairpin. The resulting overall structure comprises an eight-stranded beta-sheet whose concave side is covered by two alpha helices. The dimer dissociates into a partially folded, monomeric species with a dissociation constant of 93(+/-10)microM.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Off-pathway intermolecular interactions between partially folded polypeptide chains often compete with correct intramolecular interactions, resulting in self-association of folding intermediates into the inclusion body state. Intermediates for both productive folding and off-pathway aggregation of the parallel beta-coil tailspike trimer of phage P22 have been identified in vivo and in vitro using native gel electrophoresis in the cold. Aggregation of folding intermediates was suppressed when refolding was initiated and allowed to proceed for a short period at 0 degrees C prior to warming to 20 degrees C. Yields of refolded tailspike trimers exceeding 80% were obtained using this temperature-shift procedure, first described by Xie and Wetlaufer (1996, Protein Sci 5:517-523). We interpret this as due to stabilization of the thermolabile monomeric intermediate at the junction between productive folding and off-pathway aggregation. Partially folded monomers, a newly identified dimer, and the protrimer folding intermediates were populated in the cold. These species were electrophoretically distinguished from the multimeric intermediates populated on the aggregation pathway. The productive protrimer intermediate is disulfide bonded (Robinson AS, King J, 1997, Nat Struct Biol 4:450-455), while the multimeric aggregation intermediates are not disulfide bonded. The partially folded dimer appears to be a precursor to the disulfide-bonded protrimer. The results support a model in which the junctional partially folded monomeric intermediate acquires resistance to aggregation in the cold by folding further to a conformation that is activated for correct recognition and subunit assembly.  相似文献   

12.
All caspases evolved from a common ancestor and subsequently developed into two general classes, inflammatory or apoptotic caspases. The caspase-hemoglobinase fold has been conserved throughout nearly one billion years of evolution and is utilized for both the monomeric and dimeric subfamilies of apoptotic caspases, called initiator and effector caspases, respectively. We compared the folding and assembly of procaspase-3b from zebrafish to that of human effector procaspases in order to examine the conservation of the folding landscape. Urea-induced equilibrium folding/unfolding of procaspase-3b showed a minimum three-state folding pathway, where the native dimer isomerizes to a partially folded dimeric intermediate, which then unfolds. A partially folded monomeric intermediate observed in the folding landscape of human procaspase-3 is not well-populated in zebrafish procaspase-3b. By comparing effector caspases from different species, we show that the effector procaspase dimer undergoes a pH-dependent conformational change, and that the conformational species in the folding landscape exhibit similar free energies. Together, the data show that the landscape for the caspase-hemoglobinase fold is conserved, yet it provides flexibility for species-specific stabilization or destabilization of folding intermediates resulting in changes in stability. The common pH-dependent conformational change in the native dimer, which yields an enzymatically inactive species, may provide an additional, albeit reversible, mechanism for controlling caspase activity in the cell.  相似文献   

13.
The possible presence of dimeric unfolding intermediates might offer a clue to understanding the relationship between tertiary and quaternary structure formation in dimers. Ascorbate oxidase is a large dimeric enzyme that displays such an intermediate along its unfolding pathway. In this study the combined effect of high pressure and denaturing agents gave new insight on this intermediate and on the mechanism of its formation. The transition from native dimer to the dimeric intermediate is characterized by the release of copper ions forming the tri-nuclear copper center located at the interface between domain 2 and 3 of each subunit. This transition, which is pH-dependent, is accompanied by a decrease in volume, probably associated to electrostriction due to the loosening of intra-subunit electrostatic interactions. The dimeric species is present even at 3 x 10(8) Pa, providing evidence that mechanically or chemically induced unfolding lead to a similar intermediate state. Instead, dissociation occurs with an extremely large and negative volume change (DeltaV approximately -200 mL.mol(-1)) by pressurization in the presence of moderate amounts of denaturant. This volume change can be ascribed to the elimination of voids at the subunit interface. Furthermore, the combination of guanidine and high pressure uncovers the presence of a marginally stable (DeltaG approximately 2 kcal.mol(-1)) monomeric species (which was not observed in previous equilibrium unfolding measurements) that might be populated in the early folding steps of ascorbate oxidase. These findings provide new aspects of the protein folding pathway, further supporting the important role of quaternary interactions in the folding strategy of large dimeric enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
This study reports the application of electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry (MS) with on-line rapid mixing for millisecond time-resolved studies of the refolding and assembly of a dimeric protein complex. Acid denaturation of S100A11 disrupts the native homodimeric protein structure. Circular dichroism and HSQC nuclear magnetic resonance measurements reveal that the monomeric subunits unfold to a moderate degree but retain a significant helicity and some tertiary structural elements. Following a rapid change in solution conditions to a slightly basic pH, the native protein reassembles with an effective rate constant of 6 s(-)(1). The ESI charge state distributions measured during the reaction suggest the presence of three kinetic species, namely, a relatively unfolded monomer (M(U)), a more tightly folded monomeric reaction intermediate (M(F)), and dimeric S100A11. These three forms exhibit distinct calcium binding properties, with very low metal loading levels for M(U), up to two calcium ions for M(F), and up to four for the dimer. Surprisingly, on-line pulsed hydrogen-deuterium exchange (HDX) reveals that each of the monomeric forms of the protein comprises two subspecies that can be distinguished on the basis of their isotope exchange levels. As the reaction proceeds, the more extensively labeled species are depleted. The exponential nature of the measured intensity-time profiles implies that the rate-determining step of the overall process is a unimolecular event. The kinetics are consistent with a sequential folding and assembly mechanism involving two increasingly nativelike monomeric intermediates en route to the native S100A11 dimer.  相似文献   

15.
Neurotoxic misfolding of Cu, Zn‐superoxide dismutase (SOD1) is implicated in causing amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a devastating and incurable neurodegenerative disease. Disease‐linked mutations in SOD1 have been proposed to promote misfolding and aggregation by decreasing protein stability and increasing the proportion of less folded forms of the protein. Here we report direct measurement of the thermodynamic effects of chemically and structurally diverse mutations on the stability of the dimer interface for metal free (apo) SOD1 using isothermal titration calorimetry and size exclusion chromatography. Remarkably, all mutations studied, even ones distant from the dimer interface, decrease interface stability, and increase the population of monomeric SOD1. We interpret the thermodynamic data to mean that substantial structural perturbations accompany dimer dissociation, resulting in the formation of poorly packed and malleable dissociated monomers. These findings provide key information for understanding the mechanisms and energetics underlying normal maturation of SOD1, as well as toxic SOD1 misfolding pathways associated with disease. Furthermore, accurate prediction of protein–protein association remains very difficult, especially when large structural changes are involved in the process, and our findings provide a quantitative set of data for such cases, to improve modelling of protein association.  相似文献   

16.
Efficient formation of specific intermolecular interactions is essential for self-assembly of biological structures. The foldon domain is an evolutionarily optimized trimerization module required for assembly of the large, trimeric structural protein fibritin from phage T4. Monomers consisting of the 27 amino acids comprising a single foldon domain subunit spontaneously form a natively folded trimer. During assembly of the foldon domain, a monomeric intermediate is formed on the submillisecond time scale, which provides the basis for two consecutive very fast association reactions. Mutation of an intermolecular salt bridge leads to a monomeric protein that resembles the kinetic intermediate in its spectroscopic properties. NMR spectroscopy revealed essentially native topology of the monomeric intermediate with defined hydrogen bonds and side-chain interactions but largely reduced stability compared to the native trimer. This structural preorganization leads to an asymmetric charge distribution on the surface that can direct rapid subunit recognition. The low stability of the intermediate allows a large free-energy gain upon trimerization, which serves as driving force for rapid assembly. These results indicate different free-energy landscapes for folding of small oligomeric proteins compared to monomeric proteins, which typically avoid the transient population of intermediates.  相似文献   

17.
A mutation at the dimer interface of Plasmodium falciparum triosephosphate isomerase (PfTIM) was created by mutating a tyrosine residue at position 74, at the subunit interface, to glycine. Tyr74 is a critical residue, forming a part of an aromatic cluster at the interface. The resultant mutant, Y74G, was found to have considerably reduced stability compared with the wild-type protein (TIMWT). The mutant was found to be much less stable to denaturing agents such as urea and guanidinium chloride. Fluorescence and circular dichroism studies revealed that the Y74G mutant and TIMWT have similar spectroscopic properties, suggestive of similar folded structures. Further, the Y74G mutant also exhibited a concentration-dependent loss of enzymatic activity over the range 0.1-10 microM. In contrast, the wild-type enzyme did not show a concentration dependence of activity in this range. Fluorescence quenching of intrinsic tryptophan emission was much more efficient in case of Y74G than TIMWT, suggestive of greater exposure of Trp11, which lies adjacent to the dimer interface. Analytical gel filtration studies revealed that in Y74G, monomeric and dimeric species are in dynamic equilibrium, with the former predominating at low protein concentration. Spectroscopic studies established that the monomeric form of the mutant is largely folded. Low concentrations of urea also drive the equilibrium towards the monomeric form. These studies suggest that the replacement of tyrosine with a small residue at the interface of triosephosphate isomerase weakens the subunit-subunit interactions, giving rise to structured, but enzymatically inactive, monomers at low protein concentration.  相似文献   

18.
The folding pathways of procaspases 3, 7, and 8 have been studied using a Go-like Hamiltonian and molecular dynamics simulations coupled with a parallel tempering scheme. The folding pathways and the overall structures of procaspases 3 and 7 are similar, and are characterized by monomeric as well as dimeric folding intermediates in agreement with the available structural and thermochemical data. The folding pathway of procaspase 8, on the other hand, is characterized by a larger population of monomers and partially folded dimer intermediates, and only a relatively small population of folded dimer species. The most stable structure predicted for procaspase 8 is a dimer, in which the position of the linker is remarkably different from the one observed in procaspases 3 and 7, leading to the fact that all the contacts that stabilize the active site are essentially formed. This novel and unexpected structure provides a rationale for the observed activity of the procaspase 8 dimer, and thus could be highly relevant for the initiation of FAS-mediated apoptosis.  相似文献   

19.
Mutations at many different sites in the gene encoding human Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD) are known to be causative agents in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). One explanation for the molecular basis of this pathology is the aggregation of marginally soluble, partially structured states whose populations are enhanced in the protein variants. As a benchmark for testing this hypothesis, the equilibrium and kinetic properties of the reversible folding reaction of a metal-free variant of SOD were investigated. Reversibility was achieved by replacing the two non-essential cysteine residues with non-oxidizable analogs, C6A/C111S, to produce apo-AS-SOD. The metal-free pseudo-wild-type protein is folded and dimeric in the absence of chemical denaturants, and its equilibrium folding behavior is well described by an apparent two-state mechanism involving the unfolded monomer and the native dimer. The apparent free energy of folding in the absence of denaturant and at standard state is -20.37(+/- 1.04) kcal (mol dimer)(-1). A global analysis of circular dichroism kinetic traces for both unfolding and refolding reactions, combined with results from small angle X-ray scattering and time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements, supports a sequential mechanism involving the unfolded monomer, a folded monomeric intermediate, and the native dimer. The rate-limiting monomer folding reaction is followed by a near diffusion-limited self-association reaction to form the native dimer. The relative population of the folded monomeric intermediate is predicted not to exceed 0.5% at micromolar concentrations of protein under equilibrium and both strongly unfolding and refolding conditions for metal-free pseudo-wild-type SOD.  相似文献   

20.
Mechanism of phage P22 tailspike protein folding mutations.   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Temperature-sensitive folding (tsf) and global-tsf-suppressor (su) point mutations affect the folding yields of the trimeric, thermostable phage P22 tailspike endorhamnosidase at elevated temperature, both in vivo and in vitro, but they have little effect on function and stability of the native folded protein. To delineate the mechanism by which these mutations modify the partitioning between productive folding and off-pathway aggregation, the kinetics of refolding after dilution from acid-urea solutions and the thermal stability of folding intermediates were analyzed. The study included five tsf mutations of varying severity, the two known su mutations, and four tsf/su double mutants. At low temperature (10 degrees C), subunit-folding rates, measured as an increase in fluorescence, were similar for wild-type and mutants. At 25 degrees C, however, tsf mutations reduced the rate of subunit folding. The su mutations increased this rate, when present in the tsf-mutant background, but had no effect in the wild-type background. Conversely, tsf mutations accelerated, and su mutations retarded the irreversible off-pathway reaction, as revealed by temperature down-shifts after varied times during refolding at high temperature (40 degrees C). The kinetic results are consistent with tsf mutations destabilizing and su mutations stabilizing an essential subunit folding intermediate. In accordance with this interpretation, tsf mutations decreased, and su mutations increased the temperature resistance of folding intermediates, as disclosed by temperature up-shifts during refolding at 25 degrees C. The stabilizing and destabilizing effects were most pronounced early during refolding. However, they were not limited to subunit-folding intermediates and were also observable during thermal unfolding of the native protein.  相似文献   

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