Unfolding Pathway (unfolding + pathway)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Pyrene Excimer Fluorescence of Yeast Alcohol Dehydrogenase: A Sensitive Probe to Investigate Ligand Binding and Unfolding Pathway of the Enzyme

PHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 2 2006
Manas Kumar Santra
ABSTRACT The cysteine residues of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase (YADH) were covalently modified by N-(1-pyrenyl) maleimide (PM). A maximum of 3.4 cysteines per YADH monomer could be modified by PM. The secondary structure of PM-YADH was found to be similar to that of the native YADH using far-UV circular dichroism. The covalent modification of YADH by PM inhibited the enzymatic activity indicating that the active site of the enzyme was altered. PM-YADH displayed maximum excimer fluorescence at an incorporation ratio of 2.6 mol of PM per monomeric subunit of YADH. Nucleotide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) divalent zinc and ethanol reduced the excimer fluorescence of PM-YADH indicating that these agents induce conformational changes in the enzyme. Guani-dinium hydrochloride (GdnHCl)-induced unfolding of YADH was analyzed using tryptophan fluorescence, pyrene excimer fluorescence and enzymatic activity. The unfolding of YADH was found to occur in a stepwise manner. The loss of enzymatic activity preceded the global unfolding of the protein. Further, changes in tryptophan fluorescence with increasing GdnHCl suggested that YADH was completely unfolded by 2.5 M GdnHCl. Interestingly, residual structures of YADH were detected even in the presence of 5 M GdnHCl using the excimer fluorescence of PM-YADH. [source]


One ,,Hairpin after the Other: Exploring Mechanical Unfolding Pathways of the Transmembrane ,-Barrel Protein OmpG,

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE, Issue 44 2009
Tanuj Sapra Dr.
Sauber auseinandergefädelt: Mithilfe der Einzelmolekül-Rasterkraftspektroskopie wurde erstmals ein äußeres Membranprotein mit ,-Fass-Struktur entfaltet. Überraschenderweise entfalten einzelne ,-Stränge von OmpG aus E. coli nicht individuell, sondern in Form von ,-Haarnadeln. Diese ,-Haarnadeln entfalten eine nach der anderen, bis das gesamte Protein entfaltet ist (siehe Bild). [source]


Physico-chemical properties of molten dimer ascorbate oxidase

FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 22 2006
Eleonora Nicolai
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 × 108 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 (,V , ,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 (,G , 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. [source]


Unfolding of the loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) myoglobin: A 1H-NMR and electronic absorbance study

PROTEIN SCIENCE, Issue 9 2002
Daniela Delli Castelli
Abstract The effect of urea concentration on the backbone solution structure of the cyanide derivative of ferric Caretta caretta myoglobin (at pH 5.4) is reported. By addition of urea, sequential and long-range nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) are gradually lost. By using the residual NOE constraints to build the molecular model, a picture of the unfolding pathway was obtained. When the urea concentration is raised to 2.2 M, helices A and B appear largely disordered; helices C, D, and F loose structural constraints at 3.0 M urea. At urea concentration >6 M, the protein appears to be fully unfolded, including the GH hairpin and helix E stabilizing the prosthetic group. Reversible and cooperative denaturation isotherms obtained by following NOE peaks are considerably different from those obtained by monitoring electronic absorption changes. The reversible and cooperative urea-dependent folding-unfolding process of C. caretta myoglobin follows the minimum three-state mechanism N,X,D, where X represents a disordered globin structure (occurring at ,4 M urea) that still binds the heme. [source]


Cleavage of the iron-methionine bond in c-type cytochromes: Crystal structure of oxidized and reduced cytochrome c2 from Rhodopseudomonas palustris and its ammonia complex

PROTEIN SCIENCE, Issue 1 2002
Silvano Geremia
Abstract The three-dimensional structures of the native cytochrome c2 from Rhodopseudomonas palustris and of its ammonia complex have been obtained at pH 4.4 and pH 8.5, respectively. The structure of the native form has been refined in the oxidized state at 1.70 Å and in the reduced state at 1.95 Å resolution. These are the first high-resolution crystal structures in both oxidation states of a cytochrome c2 with relatively high redox potential (+350 mV). The differences between the two oxidation states of the native form, including the position of internal water molecules, are small. The unusual six-residue insertion Gly82-Ala87, which precedes the heme binding Met93, forms an isolated 310 -helix secondary structural element not previously observed in other c-type cytochromes. Furthermore, this cytochrome shows an external methionine residue involved in a strained folding near the exposed edge of the heme. The structural comparison of the present cytochrome c2 with other c-type cytochromes has revealed that the presence of such a residue, with torsion angles , and , of approximately ,140 and ,130°, respectively, is a typical feature of this family of proteins. The refined crystal structure of the ammonia complex, obtained at 1.15 Å resolution, shows that the sulphur atom of the Met93 axial ligand does not coordinate the heme iron atom, but is replaced by an exogenous ammonia molecule. This is the only example so far reported of an X-ray structure with the heme iron coordinated by an ammonia molecule. The detachment of Met93 is accompanied by a very localized change in backbone conformation, involving mainly the residues Lys92, Met93, and Thr94. Previous studies under typical denaturing conditions, including high-pH values and the presence of exogenous ligands, have shown that the detachment of the Met axial ligand is a basic step in the folding/unfolding process of c-type cytochromes. The ammonia adduct represents a structural model for this important step of the unfolding pathway. Factors proposed to be important for the methionine dissociation are the strength of the H-bond between the Met93 and Tyr66 residues that stabilizes the native form, and the presence in this bacterial cytochrome c2 of the rare six-residue insertion in the helix 310 conformation that increases Met loop flexibility. [source]


LpxA: A natural nanotube,

BIOPOLYMERS, Issue 10 2010
Atanu Das
Abstract UDP-N-acetylglucosamine 3-O-acyltransferase is a protein with a left-handed parallel ,-helix, which is a natural nanotube. They are associated with unusual high stability. To identify the reason behind the structural stability of ,-helical nanotubular structure, we have performed a total of 4 ,s molecular dynamics simulations of the protein in implicit solvent at four different temperatures and monitored the unfolding pathway. The correlation in movement between different regions of the nanotubular structure has been identified from the dynamical cross-correlation map and contribution of some specific residues towards unfolding transition has been identified by principal component analysis. Difference in stability of the three loop regions has also been characterized. Construction of the unfolding conformational energy landscape identifies the probable intermediates that can appear in the unfolding pathway of the protein. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 93: 845,853, 2010. [source]


Temperature,pressure stability of green fluorescent protein: A Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy study

BIOPOLYMERS, Issue 4 2002
Carsten H. Scheyhing
Abstract Green fluorescent protein (GFP) is widely used as a marker in molecular and cell biology. For its use in high-pressure microbiology experiments, its fluorescence under pressure was recently investigated. Changes in fluorescence with pressure were found. To find out whether these are related to structural changes, we investigated the pressure stability of wild-type GFP (wtGFP) and three of its red shift mutants (AFP, GFPmut1, and GFPmut2) using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. For the wt GFP, GFPmut1, and GFPmut2 we found that up to 13,14 kbar the secondary structure remains intact, whereas AFP starts unfolding around 10 kbar. The 3-D structure is held responsible for this high-pressure stability. Previously observed changes in fluorescence at low pressure are rationalized in terms of the pressure-induced elastic effect. Above 6 kbar, loss of fluorescence is due to aggregation. Revisiting the temperature stability of GFP, we found that an intermediate state is populated along the unfolding pathway of wtGFP. At higher temperatures, the unfolding resulted in the formation of aggregates of wtGFP and its mutants. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 65: 244,253, 2002 [source]


Conformational stability and multistate unfolding of poly(A)-specific ribonuclease

FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 10 2009
Guang-Jun He
Poly(A)-specific ribonuclease (PARN) specifically catalyzes the degradation of the poly(A) tails of single-stranded mRNAs in a highly processive mode. PARN participates in diverse and important intracellular processes by acting as a regulator of mRNA stability and translational efficiency. In this article, the equilibrium unfolding of PARN was studied using both guanidine hydrochloride and urea as chemical denaturants. The unfolding of PARN was characterized as a multistate process, but involving dissimilar equilibrium intermediates when denatured by the two denaturants. A comparison of the spectral characteristics of these intermediates indicated that the conformational changes at low concentrations of the chemical denaturants were more likely to be rearrangements of the tertiary and quaternary structures. In particular, an inactive molten globule-like intermediate was identified to exist as soluble non-native oligomers, and the formation of the oligomers was modulated by electrostatic interactions. An active dimeric intermediate unique to urea-induced unfolding was characterized to have increased regular secondary structures and modified tertiary structures, implying that additional regular structures could be induced by environmental stresses. The dissimilarity in the unfolding pathways induced by guanidine hydrochloride and urea suggest that electrostatic interactions play an important role in PARN stability and regulation. The appearance of multiple intermediates with distinct properties provides the structural basis for the multilevel regulation of PARN by conformational changes. [source]