Development of a novel method to populate native disulfide-bonded intermediates for structural characterization of proteins: implications for the mechanism of oxidative folding of RNase A

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_1D46DEFCAC48
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Development of a novel method to populate native disulfide-bonded intermediates for structural characterization of proteins: implications for the mechanism of oxidative folding of RNase A
Journal
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Author(s)
English  B. P., Welker  E., Narayan  M., Scheraga  H. A.
ISSN
0002-7863 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
05/2002
Volume
124
Number
18
Pages
4995-9
Notes
Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. --- Old month value: May 8
Abstract
RNase A, a model protein for oxidative folding studies, has four native disulfide bonds. The roles of des [40-95] and des [65-72], the two native-like structured three-disulfide-bonded intermediates populated between 8 and 25 degrees C during the oxidative folding of RNase A, are well characterized. Recent work focuses on both the formation of these structured disulfide intermediates from their unstructured precursors and on the subsequent oxidation of the structured species to form the native protein. The major obstacles in this work are the very low concentration of the precursor species and the difficulty of isolating some of the structured intermediates. Here, we demonstrate a novel method that enables the native disulfide-bonded intermediates to be populated and studied regardless of whether they have stable structure and/or are present at low concentrations during the oxidative folding or reductive unfolding process. The application of this method enabled us to populate and, in turn, study the key intermediates with two native disulfide bonds on the oxidative folding pathway of RNase A; it also facilitated the isolation of des [58-110] and des [26-84], the other two native-like structured des species whose isolation had thus far not been possible.
Keywords
Animals Cattle Disulfides/*chemistry Kinetics Oxidation-Reduction Phosphines/chemistry Protein Conformation Protein Folding Ribonuclease, Pancreatic/*chemistry
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
24/01/2008 15:40
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:53
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