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1.
Ligand-induced biphasic protein denaturation   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The results of a thermodynamic calculation of the excess heat capacity that is based on experimental observations and that incorporates the effects of ligand binding on the two-state, thermal denaturation of a protein are presented. For a protein with a single-binding site on the native species and at subsaturating concentrations of ligand, bimodal or unimodal thermograms were computed merely by assuming a larger or smaller ligand association constant, respectively. The calculated thermograms for this simplified case show the salient features of those observed by differential scanning calorimetry for defatted human albumin monomer in the absence and presence of three ligands for which the protein has higher, intermediate, and lower affinity (Shrake, A., and Ross, P. D. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 15392-15399). The computation demonstrates that biphasic unfolding can result from a significant increase in the free energy of denaturation (and the transition temperature) during the course of unfolding due to a substantial increase in free ligand concentration caused by the release of bound ligand by denaturing protein. Such ligand-induced biphasic denaturation does not relate to macromolecular substructure but derives from a perturbation, during unfolding, of the ligand binding equilibrium, which is coupled to the equilibrium between the folded and unfolded protein species. Thus, this bimodality is not limited to thermally induced unfolding but is operative independent of the means used to effect denaturation and therefore must be considered when studying any macromolecular folding/unfolding reaction in the presence of ligand.  相似文献   

2.
The conformational stability of the histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr) from Bacillus subtilis has been determined using a combination of thermal unfolding and solvent denaturation experiments. The urea-induced denaturation of HPr was monitored spectroscopically at fixed temperatures and thermal unfolding was performed in the presence of fixed concentrations of urea. These data were analyzed in several different ways to afford a measure of the cardinal parameters (delta Hg, Tg, delta Sg, and delta Cp) that describe the thermodynamics of folding for HPr. The method of Pace and Laurents (Pace CN, Laurents DV, 1989, Biochemistry 28:2520-2525) was used to estimate delta Cp as was a global analysis of the thermal- and urea-induced unfolding data. Each method used to analyze the data gives a similar value for delta Cp (1,170 +/- 50 cal mol-1K-1). Despite the high melting temperature for HPr (Tg = 73.5 degrees C), the maximum stability of the protein, which occurs at 26 degrees C, is quite modest (delta Gs = 4.2 kcal mol-1). In the presence of moderate concentrations of urea, HPr exhibits cold denaturation, and thus a complete stability curve for HPr, including a measure of delta Cp, can be achieved using the method of Chen and Schellman (Chen B, Schellman JA, 1989, Biochemistry 28:685-691). A comparison of the different methods for the analysis of solvent denaturation curves is provided and the effects of urea on the thermal stability of this small globular protein are discussed. The methods presented will be of general utility in the characterization of the stability curve for many small proteins.  相似文献   

3.
The stability (reflected in denaturation temperature, Td) of defatted human albumin monomer, monitored by differential scanning calorimetry, decreases with increasing protein concentration. This is shown to be compatible with a simple model in which reversible polymerization of denatured monomer promotes unfolding. This model also predicts an increase in transition cooperativity with decreasing protein concentration whereas experimentally cooperativity decreases because the rate of thermally induced polymerization of unfolded monomer is slow relative to the scan rate of the calorimeter. The denaturation of undefatted human albumin monomer, subsaturated with high affinity endogenous long-chain fatty acid (LCFA), was previously observed by differential scanning calorimetry to be a biphasic process. Td for the first endotherm, associated with the denaturation of LCFA-poor species, decreases with increasing protein concentration similar to that for defatted monomer whereas Td for the second endotherm, associated with denaturation of LCFA-rich species, is independent of concentration. The magnitude of the concentration dependence of Td relates directly to the extent of polymerization of denatured monomer, which decreases with increasing level of bound ligand. The bimodal thermogram observed for undefatted monomer persists upon simultaneous extrapolation of Td values to low concentration and low scan rate thereby demonstrating that this biphasic denaturation arising from ligand redistribution during denaturation is a true thermodynamic phenomenon and not an artifact of specific experimental conditions or the method used to induce denaturation.  相似文献   

4.
We have used thermal and chemical denaturation to characterize the thermodynamics of unfolding for turkey ovomucoid third domain (OMTKY3). Thermal denaturation was monitored spectroscopically at a number of wave-lengths and data were subjected to van't Hoff analysis; at pH 2.0, the midpoint of denaturation (Tm) occurs at 58.6 +/- 0.4 degrees C and the enthalpy of unfolding at this temperature (delta Hm) is 40.8 +/- 0.3 kcal/mol. When Tm was perturbed by varying pH and denaturant concentration, the resulting plots of delta Hm versus Tm yield a mean value of 590 +/- 120 cal/(mol.K) for the change in heat capacity upon unfolding (delta Cp). A global fit of the same data to an equation that includes the temperature dependence for the enthalpy of unfolding yielded a value of 640 +/- 110 cal/(mol.K). We also performed a variation of the linear extrapolation method described by Pace and Laurents, which is an independent method for determining delta Cp (Pace, C.N. & Laurents, D., 1989, Biochemistry 28, 2520-2525). First, OMTKY3 was thermally denatured in the presence of a variety of denaturant concentrations. Linear extrapolations were then made from isothermal slices through the transition region of the denaturation curves. When extrapolated free energies of unfolding (delta Gu) were plotted versus temperature, the resulting curve appeared linear; therefore, delta Cp could not be determined. However, the data for delta Gu versus denaturant concentration are linear over an extraordinarily wide range of concentrations. Moreover, extrapolated values of delta Gu in urea are identical to values measured directly.  相似文献   

5.
A Tamura  K Kimura  H Takahara  K Akasaka 《Biochemistry》1991,30(47):11307-11313
Cold denaturation and heat denaturation of the protein Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor (SSI) were studied in the pH range 1.84-3.21 and in the temperature range -3-70 degrees C by circular dichroism and scanning microcalorimetry. The native structure of the protein was apparently most stabilized at about 20 degrees C and was denatured upon heating and cooling from this temperature. Each denaturation was reversible and cooperative, proceeding in two-state transitions, that is, from the native state to the cold-denatured state or from the native state to the heat-denatured state. The two denatured states, however, were not perfect random-coiled structures, and they differed from each other, indicating that there exist three states in this temperature range, i.e., cold denatured, native, and heat denatured. The difference between the cold and heat denaturations was indicated first by circular dichroism. The isodichroic point for the transition from the native state to the cold-denatured state was different from that from the native state to the heat-denatured state in the pH range between 3.21 and 2.45. Moreover, molar ellipticity for the cold-denatured state was different from that of the heat-denatured state, and the transition from the former to the latter was observed at pH values below 2. Values of van't Hoff enthalpies from the native state to the heat-denatured state at pH values between 3.21 and 2.45 were obtained by curve fitting of the CD data, and delta Cp = 1.82 (+/- 0.11) [kcal/(mol.K)] was obtained from the linear plot of the enthalpies against temperature. The parameters obtained from the heat denaturation studies gave curves for delta G zero which were not in agreement with the experimental data in the cold denaturation region when extrapolated to the low temperature. Moreover, the value of the apparent delta Cp for the cold denaturation in the pH range 3.03-2.45 was estimated to be different from that for the heat denaturation, indicating that the mechanism of the cold denaturation of SSI is different from a simple cold denaturation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Typical physico-chemical studies of metal binding proteins are usually aimed at determination of the metal binding constant K for a native protein (K n), while the significance of the K value for the thermally denatured protein (K u) is usually underestimated. Meanwhile, metal binding induced shift of thermal denaturation transition of a single site metal binding protein is defined by K n to K u ratio, implying that knowledge of both K values is required for full characterization of the system. In the present work, the most universal approach to the studies of single site metal binding proteins, namely construction of a protein “phase diagram” in coordinates of free metal ion concentration – temperature, is considered in detail. The detailed algorithm of construction of the phase diagrams along with underlying mathematic procedures developed here may be of use for studies of other simple protein-target type systems, where target represents low molecular weight ligand. Analysis of the simplest protein-ligand system reveals that thermodynamic properties of apo-protein dictate the maximal possible increase of its affinity to any simple ligand upon thermal denaturation of the protein. Experimental and general problems coupled with the use of the phase diagrams are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Unfolding, inactivation and dissociation of the lectin from Artocarpus hirsuta seeds were studied by chemical (guanidine hydrochloride, GdnHCl) and thermal denaturation. Conformational transitions were monitored by intrinsic fluorescence and circular dichroism. The gradual red shift in the emission maxima of the native protein from 335 to 356 nm, change in the ellipticity at 218 nm and simultaneous decrease in the sugar binding activity were observed with increasing concentration of GdnHCl in the pH range between 4.0 and 9.0. The unfolding and inactivation by GdnHCl were partially reversible. Gel filtration of the lectin in presence of 1-6 m GdnHCl showed that the protein dissociates reversibly into partially unfolded dimer and then irreversibly into unfolded inactive monomer. Thermal denaturation was irreversible. The lectin loses activity rapidly above 45 degrees C. The exposure of hydrophobic patches, distorted secondary structure and formation of insoluble aggregates of the thermally inactivated protein probably leads to the irreversible denaturation.  相似文献   

8.
Holo and apo adrenodoxin were studied by differential scanning calorimetry, absorption spectroscopy, limited proteolysis, and size-exclusion chromatography. To determine the conformational stability of adrenodoxin, a method was found that prevents the irreversible destruction of the iron-sulfur center. The approach makes use of a buffer solution that contains sodium sulfide and mercaptoethanol. The thermal transition of adrenodoxin takes place at Ttrs = 46-57 degrees C, depending on the Na2S concentration with a denaturation enthalpy of delta H = 300-380 kJ/mol. From delta H versus Ttrs a heat capacity change was determined as delta Cp = 7.5 +/- 1.2 kJ/mol/K. The apo protein is less stable than the holo protein as judged by the lower denaturation enthalpy (delta H = 93 +/- 14 kJ/mol at Ttrs = 37.4 +/- 3.3 degrees C) and the higher proteolytic susceptibility. The importance of the iron-sulfur cluster for the conformational stability of adrenodoxin and some conditions for refolding of the thermally denatured protein are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of interactions of sorbitol with ribonuclease A (RNase A) and the resulting stabilization of structure was examined in parallel thermal unfolding and preferential binding studies with the application of multicomponent thermodynamic theory. The protein was stabilized by sorbitol both at pH 2.0 and pH 5.5 as the transition temperature, Tm, was increased. The enthalpy of the thermal denaturation had a small dependence on sorbitol concentration, which was reflected in the values of the standard free energy change of denaturation, delta delta G(o) = delta G(o) (sorbitol) - delta G(o)(water). Measurements of preferential interactions at 48 degrees C at pH 5.5, where protein is native, and pH 2.0 where it is denatured, showed that sorbitol is preferentially excluded from the denatured protein up to 40%, but becomes preferentially bound to native protein above 20% sorbitol. The chemical potential change on transferring the denatured RNase A from water to sorbitol solution is larger than that for the native protein, delta mu(2D) > delta mu(2N), which is consistent with the effect of sorbitol on the free energy change of denaturation. The conformity of these results to the thermodynamic expression of the effect of a co-solvent on denaturation, delta G(o)(W) + delta mu(D)(2)delta G(o)(S) + delta mu(2D), indicates that the stabilization of the protein by sorbitol can be fully accounted for by weak thermodynamic interactions at the protein surface that involve water reversible co-solvent exchange at thermodynamically non-neutral sites. The protein structure stabilizing action of sorbitol is driven by stronger exclusion from the unfolded protein than from the native structure.  相似文献   

10.
Denaturation of defatted human albumin monomer, monitored by differential scanning calorimetry, is monophasic as reflected by the single, resulting endotherm. With low levels of various ligands, biphasic or monophasic unfolding processes are manifested as bimodal or unimodal thermograms, respectively. The greater the affinity of native protein for ligand, the greater is the tendency for biphasic denaturation. We propose that such a biphasic unfolding process arises from a substantial increase in stability (transition temperature) of remaining native protein during denaturation. This increase in stability derives from the free energy of ligand binding becoming more negative due to the release of high affinity ligand by unfolding protein. The tendency for biphasic denaturation is greatest at low (subsaturating) levels of ligand where greatest increases in stability occur. Biphasic unfolding arising from such ligand redistribution results from denaturation of different kinds of protein molecules, ligand-poor and ligand-rich species, and not from sequential unfolding of domains within the same molecule. Differentiating between these two mechanisms is necessary for the correct interpretation of biphasic denaturation data. Furthermore, biphasic unfolding due to ligand redistribution occurs independently of the means used to effect denaturation. The maximum increase in stability due to ligand binding relative to the stability of defatted albumin monomer alone occurs with the intermediate affinity ligand octanoate (22 degrees C) and not with the high affinity ligand hexadecanoate (15 degrees C). This indicates a much greater affinity of denatured albumin for hexadecanoate since increase in stability derives from the difference between free energy of ligand binding to folded and unfolded protein forms.  相似文献   

11.
We have examined the interaction of the Escherichia coli trp aporepressor with its ligand, L-tryptophan, using both equilibrium dialysis and flow dialysis methods. Results obtained by the two procedures were equivalent and indicate that the trp aporepressor binds L-tryptophan with an equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) of 40 microM at 25 degrees C under standard binding assay conditions (10 mM potassium phosphate, pH 7.4, 0.2 M potassium chloride, 0.1 mM EDTA, 5% glycerol). Molecular sizing of the purified trp aporepressor shows that in the absence of ligand the regulatory protein exists as a dimeric species with greater than 99% purity and an apparent molecular weight of 30,000. Under the storage and assay conditions used, the dimer appears quite stable, and essentially no monomer or higher multimeric species are detected. Analysis of binding data by Scatchard and direct linear plot methods shows two identical and independent ligand-binding sites/native trp aporepressor dimer. When examined as a function of temperature, L-tryptophan binding by trp aporepressor varied over 7-fold (Kd = 28 microM at 6.5 degrees C to Kd = 217 microM at 40 degrees C). At the optimal growth temperature for E. coli (37 degrees C), the dissociation constant was 160 microM for the ligand, L-tryptophan. From the relationship between temperature and L-tryptophan binding by trp aporepressor, the apparent enthalpy change delta H = -10.6 +/- 0.6 kcal mol-1 and the apparent entropy change delta S = -17 +/- 2 cal degree-1 mol-1 were determined.  相似文献   

12.
1. The objective of this investigation was to determine whether structural differences between apolipoproteins could be detected by heat denaturation. 2. The apoproteins of human serum high density lipoprotein (HDL2, d = 1.070-1.125 and HDL3, d = 1.125-1.21 g/ml), their major polypeptide constituents (R-Thr and R-Gln), and apochylomicrons were investigated. 3. Heat denaturation was found to be reversible in the temperature range from 20 to 80 degrees. 4. The thermodynamic parameters of heat denaturation delta F, delta H, delta S and delta Cp were calculated on the basis of a single transition from the "native" to "denatured" state for apo-HDL2, apochylomicrons, R-Thr and R-Gln; for apo-HDL3 these parameters were calculated on the basis of two transitions. 5. The thermodynamic parameters, with the exception of delta F, which describe heat denaturation of high density apolipoprotein, of high density apolipoprotein polypeptides and of apochylomicrons were found to be similar on a molar basis and to have approximately the same values as the thermodynamic parameters which describe heat denaturation of non-lipid binding proteins; on a weight basis differences were apparent between the apolipoproteins and the polypeptides or non-lipid binding proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Through the use of CD and DSC, the thermal unfolding of holo serum retinol binding protein containing a single, tightly bound retinol ligand was studied at pH 7.4. The DSC endotherm of the holoprotein ([retinol]/[protein] = 1) was asymmetric about the transition temperature of 78 degrees C. Using changes in ellipticity at 230 nm, the thermal unfolding curve was also asymmetric about the inflection point centered near 78 degrees C. van't Hoff enthalpies were determined by three means and compared to the calorimetric enthalpy (delta Hcal) of 200 kcal/mol. A van't Hoff enthalpy of 190 kcal/mol was determined from the dependence of transition temperature on the concentration of the ligand-bound protein. This value agreed well with the van't Hoff enthalpies found from fits of the DSC (delta HvH = 184 kcal/mol) and spectroscopic (delta HvH = 181 kcal/mol) curves to a two-state thermodynamic model that included ligand dissociation (NR in equilibrium with U+R, where NR is the native holoprotein, U is the unfolded apoprotein, and R is retinol). Poor agreement was obtained with a two-state model that ignored ligand dissociation (N in equilibrium with U). Furthermore, the NR in equilibrium with U+R model accounted for the asymmetry in both CD and DSC transitions and yielded a much improved fit of the data over the N in equilibrium with U model. From these considerations and simulations on other equilibrium models, it is suggested that the NR in equilibrium with U+R model is the simplest model that describes the thermal unfolding of this ligand-bound protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Layton CJ  Hellinga HW 《Biochemistry》2010,49(51):10831-10841
The quantification of protein-ligand interactions is essential for systems biology, drug discovery, and bioengineering. Ligand-induced changes in protein thermal stability provide a general, quantifiable signature of binding and may be monitored with dyes such as Sypro Orange (SO), which increase their fluorescence emission intensities upon interaction with the unfolded protein. This method is an experimentally straightforward, economical, and high-throughput approach for observing thermal melts using commonly available real-time polymerase chain reaction instrumentation. However, quantitative analysis requires careful consideration of the dye-mediated reporting mechanism and the underlying thermodynamic model. We determine affinity constants by analysis of ligand-mediated shifts in melting-temperature midpoint values. Ligand affinity is determined in a ligand titration series from shifts in free energies of stability at a common reference temperature. Thermodynamic parameters are obtained by fitting the inverse first derivative of the experimental signal reporting on thermal denaturation with equations that incorporate linear or nonlinear baseline models. We apply these methods to fit protein melts monitored with SO that exhibit prominent nonlinear post-transition baselines. SO can perturb the equilibria on which it is reporting. We analyze cases in which the ligand binds to both the native and denatured state or to the native state only and cases in which protein:ligand stoichiometry needs to treated explicitly.  相似文献   

15.
P Alexander  S Fahnestock  T Lee  J Orban  P Bryan 《Biochemistry》1992,31(14):3597-3603
We have cloned, expressed, and characterized two naturally occurring variations of the IgG-binding domain of streptococcal protein G. The domain is a stable cooperative folding unit of 56 amino acids, which maintains a unique folded structure without disulfide cross-links or tight ligand binding. We have studied the thermodynamics of the unfolding reaction for the two versions of this domain, designated B1 and B2, which differ by six amino acids. They have denaturation temperatures of 87.5 degrees C and 79.4 degrees C, respectively at pH 5.4, as determined by differential scanning calorimetry. Thermodynamic state functions for the unfolding reaction (delta G, delta H, delta S, and delta Cp) have been determined and reveal several interesting insights into the behavior of very small proteins. First, though the B1 domain has a heat denaturation point close to 90 degrees C, it is not unusually stable at physiologically relevant temperatures (delta G = 25 kJ/mol at 37 degrees C). This behavior occurs because the stability profile (delta G vs temperature) is flat and shallow due to the small delta S and delta Cp for unfolding. Related to this point is the second observation that small changes in the free energy of unfolding of the B-domain due to mutation or change in solvent conditions lead to large shifts in the heat denaturation temperature. Third, the magnitude and relative contributions of hydrophobic vs nonhydrophobic forces (per amino acid residue) to the total free energy of folding of the B-domain are remarkably typical of other globular proteins of much larger size.  相似文献   

16.
Quantitative affinity chromatography on uridine-5'-(Sepharose-4-aminophenylphosphoryl)-2'(3')-phosphate was developed for the study of binding of ribonuclease species to nucleotide ligands. Elution of the native species ribonuclease-A and -S on the afffinity matrix in 0.4 M ammonium acetate, pH 5.2, containing various amounts of the soluble competing ligand 2'-cytidine monophosphate, reveals an inverse response of elution volume to concentration of soluble ligand. This response conforms to behavior expected for the competing binding equilibria enzyme-soluble ligand and enzyme-insoluble ligand. A-NALYSIS OF ELUTION DATA ALLOWS CALCULATION OF KI and KIM, the dissociation constants, respectively, for the soluble and insoluble protein-ligand complexes. The values of these chromatographically derived constants are similar to values of dissocation constants determined in solution by kinetics of inhibition by 2'-cytidine monophosphate and uridine-5'-(j-aminophenylphosphoryl)-2'(3')-phosphate. Successful competitive elution experiments with [p-F-Phe8]semisynthetic ribonuclease-S' and individual elution trials for [4-F-His12]semisynthetic ribonuclease-S' indicate the utility of the quantitative affinity chromatographic technique for determination of ligand binding properties of ribonuclease derivatives, including inactive species. Nonbiospecific aspects of the interaction of ribonuclease with the affinity matrix in ammonium acetate buffers of concentrations 0.1 M and below were noted, delinating limits of conditions allowing the biospecificity needed for ligand-binding analyses by competitive elution. The dependence of ribonuclease competitive elution behavior on the amount of protein eluted also was examined and related to theoretical considerations in the quantitative application of affinity chromatography.  相似文献   

17.
The thermal denaturation of a recombinant human gamma-interferon has been studied as a function of pH in the range from 2 to 10 and buffer concentration in the range from 5 to 100 mM by differential scanning calorimetry, circular dichroism, fluorescence, 1H NMR, and biological activity measurements. The thermal transitions are irreversible at high buffer concentrations at all pH values studied, although they are reversible between pH 3.5 and 5.4 at low buffer concentrations. The denaturation enthalpy, DeltaH(Tm), at denaturation temperature Tm was a function of both Tm and the buffer concentration, and this resulted in heat capacity changes decreasing with buffer concentration. When the denaturation enthalpies were corrected for Tm dependence, they did not appear to change versus pH. The denaturation entropies, however, appeared to decrease with pH, leading to a small but appreciable increase in the stability of the protein with pH. The difference between the number of moles of protons stoichiometrically bound to a mole of protein in the native and thermally denatured state, was calculated from the variation of Tm versus pH at each buffer concentration. The values obtained appear to depend on pH alone rather than upon temperature or buffer concentration, a result which agrees with the invariance of the denaturation enthalpies with pH. This dependence was fitted to the titration curve of a group with a pK of 5.4.  相似文献   

18.
There is growing evidence that metal ions can accelerate the aggregation process of several proteins. This process, associated with several neuro-degenerative diseases, has been reported also for non-pathological proteins. In the present work, the effects of copper and zinc ions on the denaturation and aggregation processes of β-lactoglobulin A (BLG-A) are investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), fluorescence, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and optical density. The DSC profiles reveal that the thermal behaviour of BLG-A is a complex process, strongly dependent on the protein concentration. For concentrations ≤0.13 mM, the thermogram shows an endothermic peak at 84.3°C, corresponding to denaturation; for concentrations >0.13 mM an exothermic peak also appears, above 90°C, related to the aggregation of the denaturated BLG-A molecules. The thioflavin T fluorescence indicates that the thermally induced aggregates show fibrillar features. The presence of either equimolar Cu2+ or Zn2+ ions in the protein solution has different effects. In particular, copper binds to the protein in the native state, as evidenced by EPR experiments, and destabilizes BLG-A by decreasing the denaturation temperature by about 10°C, whereas zinc ions probably perturb the partially denaturated state of the protein. The kinetics of BLG-A aggregation shows that both metal ions abolish the lag phase before the aggregation starts. Moreover, the rate of the process is 4.6-fold higher in the presence of copper, whereas the effect of zinc is negligible. The increase of the aggregation rate, induced by copper, may be due to a site-specific binding of the metal ion on the protein.  相似文献   

19.
Thermal denaturation profiles for human plasma fibronectin under a variety of conditions have been determined. Although a single melting curve for this protein, with a thermal transition midpoint of 58.4 +/- 1.0 degree C and a calorimetric enthalpy change (delta Hc) of 1040 +/- 100 kcal/mol, is obtained in dilute neutral salt solutions, it is estimated that a total of seven to eight independent two-state thermal transitions are present in this endotherm. These values are not significantly altered by the presence of Ca2+, up to levels of at least 20 mM. Upon variation of the pH, no distinct thermal transitions are noted at values below pH 5.0 and above pH 10.0. Between pH 7.0 and 10.0, virtually no alterations in the thermotropic properties of fibronectin are observed, indicating that the individual domains of this protein, which contribute to the thermogram, are preserved in this pH range. Upon alteration of the ionic strength of the buffer, from 0.05 to 0.4 M KCl, small changes are observed in the thermal transition profiles of fibronectin, indicative of conformational changes in the protein resulting in a larger number of cooperative units undergoing the temperature-induced unfolding reaction.  相似文献   

20.
Campos LA  Sancho J 《Proteins》2006,63(3):581-594
Flavodoxins are useful models to investigate protein/cofactor interactions. The binding energy of the apoflavodoxin-FMN complex is high and therefore the holoflavodoxin is expected to be more stable than the apoprotein. This expectation has been challenged by reports on the stability of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans flavodoxin indicating that FMN binds to the unfolded polypeptide with similar affinity as to the native state, thus causing no net effect on protein stability. In previous work, we have analyzed in detail the stability of the apoflavodoxin from Anabaena PCC 7119 and the energetics of its functional complex with FMN. Here, we use the Anabaena holoprotein to directly investigate the contribution of the bound cofactor to protein stability through a detailed analysis of the chemical and thermal denaturation equilibria. Our data clearly shows that FMN binding largely stabilizes the protein towards both chemical and thermal denaturation, and that the stabilization observed at 25 degrees C in low ionic strength conditions is precisely the one expected if full release of the cofactor takes place upon flavodoxin unfolding. On the other hand, the binding of FMN to the native polypeptide is shown to simplify the thermal unfolding so that, while apoflavodoxin follows a three-state mechanism, the holoprotein unfolds in a two-state fashion. Comparison of the X-ray structure of native apoflavodoxin with the phi-structure of the thermal intermediate indicates that the increase in cooperativity driven by the cofactor originates in its preferential binding to the native state, which is a consequence of the disorganization in the intermediate of the FMN binding loops and of an adjacent longer loop.  相似文献   

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