Structures of apomyoglobin's various acid-destabilized forms |
| |
Authors: | Gilmanshin R Gulotta M Dyer R B Callender R H |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Biochemistry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461, USA. |
| |
Abstract: | The structures and the cold and hot melting thermodynamics of the acid- and salt-destabilized states of horse heart apomyoglobin (apoMb), including the E (extended) and various I forms, are studied using probes of tertiary structure (tryptophan fluorescence and FTIR spectroscopy) and secondary structure (far-UV CD and FTIR spectroscopy). These forms likely resemble early structures in the folding of the largely helical protein. Both the I and E forms retain the AGH core whereby the two ends of the protein are tied together with sufficient numbers of tertiary contacts, involving a number of hydrophobic residues, to show cooperative melting. The melting thermodynamics of E and I are distinctly different. E contains no other tertiary structure and probably little other secondary structure apart from the core. The more destabilized E form appears to contain "random" buried runs of polypeptide backbone which convert to alpha-helix in the I form(s). Most interestingly, E consists not of a single structure but is composed of a heterogeneous mixture of conformations, all showing corelike cooperative melting characteristics, and consisting presumably of varying contacts between the A portion of apomyoglobin and the G-H hairpin. These results bear on the energy landscape and structural features of the early part of apomyoglobin's folding pathway. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|