| Literature DB >> 15574490 |
Ervin Welker1, Kosuke Maki, M C Ramachandra Shastry, Darmawi Juminaga, Rajiv Bhat, Harold A Scheraga, Heinrich Roder.
Abstract
The earliest folding events in single-tryptophan mutants of RNase A were investigated by fluorescence measurements by using a combination of stopped-flow and continuous-flow mixing experiments covering the time range from 70 micros to 10 s. An ultrarapid double-jump mixing protocol was used to study refolding from an unfolded ensemble containing only native proline isomers. The continuous-flow measurements revealed a series of kinetic events on the submillisecond time scale that account for the burst-phase signal observed in previous stopped-flow experiments. An initial increase in fluorescence within the 70-micros dead time of the continuous-flow experiment is consistent with a relatively nonspecific collapse of the polypeptide chain whereas a subsequent decrease in fluorescence with a time constant of approximately 80 micros is indicative of a more specific structural event. These rapid conformational changes are not observed if RNase A is allowed to equilibrate under denaturing conditions, resulting in formation of nonnative proline isomers. Thus, contrary to previous expectations, the isomerization state of proline peptide bonds can have a major impact on the structural events during early stages of folding.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15574490 PMCID: PMC539777 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0407999101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205