Literature DB >> 17061249

Albumin is a redox-active crowding agent that promotes oxidative folding of cysteine-rich peptides.

Olga Buczek1, Brad R Green, Grzegorz Bulaj.   

Abstract

Oxidative folding that occurs in a crowded cellular milieu is characterized by multifaceted interactions that occur among nascent polypeptides and resident components of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen. Macromolecular crowding has been considered an essential factor in the folding of polypeptides, but the excluded volume effect has not been evaluated for small, disulfide-rich peptides. In the research presented, we examined how macromolecular crowding agents, such as albumin, ovalbumin, and polysaccharides, influenced the kinetics and thermodynamics of forming disulfide bonds in four model peptides of varying molecular size from 13 residues (1.4 kDa) to 58-residues (6.5 kDa): conotoxins: GI, PVIIA, r11a, and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. Our results indicate that the excluded volume effect does not significantly alter the folding rates nor equilibria for these peptides. In stark contrast, folding reactions were dramatically accelerated, when protein-based crowding agents were present at concentrations lower than those predicted to provide the excluded volume effect. Submillimolar albumin alone was as effective as glutathione in promoting the oxidative folding of GI conotoxin at concentrations typically found in the ER. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report and quantitative characterization of oxidative folding of peptides mediated by other than thioredoxin-based protein disulfide bonds. Our work raises a possibility that concurrent secretory and ER-resident proteins may influence the oxidative folding of small, cysteine-rich peptides not as crowding agents, but as redox-active factors.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17061249     DOI: 10.1002/bip.20615

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biopolymers        ISSN: 0006-3525            Impact factor:   2.505


  5 in total

1.  Serum albumin prevents protein aggregation and amyloid formation and retains chaperone-like activity in the presence of physiological ligands.

Authors:  Thomas E Finn; Andrea C Nunez; Margaret Sunde; Simon B Easterbrook-Smith
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2012-05-01       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 2.  Techniques for the analysis of cysteine sulfhydryls and oxidative protein folding.

Authors:  Chad R Borges; Nisha D Sherma
Journal:  Antioxid Redox Signal       Date:  2014-02-18       Impact factor: 8.401

3.  Distinct disulfide isomers of μ-conotoxins KIIIA and KIIIB block voltage-gated sodium channels.

Authors:  Keith K Khoo; Kallol Gupta; Brad R Green; Min-Min Zhang; Maren Watkins; Baldomero M Olivera; Padmanabhan Balaram; Doju Yoshikami; Grzegorz Bulaj; Raymond S Norton
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2012-11-28       Impact factor: 3.162

Review 4.  What macromolecular crowding can do to a protein.

Authors:  Irina M Kuznetsova; Konstantin K Turoverov; Vladimir N Uversky
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2014-12-12       Impact factor: 5.923

5.  Role of SH levels and markers of immune response in the stroke.

Authors:  Maria Musumeci; Stefano Sotgiu; Silvia Persichilli; Giannina Arru; Silvia Angeletti; Maria Laura Fois; Angelo Minucci; Salvatore Musumeci
Journal:  Dis Markers       Date:  2013-08-20       Impact factor: 3.434

  5 in total

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