| Literature DB >> 32050721 |
Yutaka Kuroda1, Shigeru Endo2, Haruki Nakamura3.
Abstract
As a tribute to Professor Oleg B. Ptitsyn, we organized an interview with Professor Akiyoshi Wada held in Tokyo in the middle of September 2019. Both Professor A. Wada and the late Professor O. B. Ptitsyn greatly contributed to the field of protein biophysics, and they played leading roles in establishing the concept of the "Molten Globule state" 35-40 years ago. This editorial is intended to recount, as accurately as possible, some episodes during the early days of protein research that led to the discovery of this state, and how this concept was coined the "Molten Globule state" and came to be widely accepted by biophysicists, biochemists, and molecular biologists.Entities:
Keywords: Akiyoshi Wada; Molten Globule state; Oleg B. Ptitsyn
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32050721 PMCID: PMC7072420 DOI: 10.3390/biom10020269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1A copy of the original 1D 1H-NMR spectrum of Cytochrome c in the Molten Globule state (initially called state IIb in Wada’s laboratory). The spectrum was measured on December 4th, 1980, with a 360 MHz NMR spectrometer at the Institute for Protein Research, Osaka University. The arrows on the left side show peaks assigned to aromatic protons exhibiting features similar to those in a random coil state (by courtesy of Prof. K. Nagayama).
Figure 2A year before the Padova meeting, O. B. Ptitsyn (first row, fourth from left) and A. Wada (third row, first from left) had met in New York in 1981 during the USA–Japan Seminar on Self-organization Protein Molecules, which was attended by several established Japanese and American protein biophysicists (by courtesy of Prof. A. V. Finkelstein).