Literature DB >> 9186491

Putative folding pathway of insulin-like growth factor-I.

R D Rosenfeld1, J A Miller, L O Narhi, N Hawkins, V Katta, S Lauren, M A Weiss, T Arakawa.   

Abstract

Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) has three disulfide bonds and refolding of the fully reduced molecule generates varying ratios of correctly (PII) and incorrectly (PI) folded forms via several intermediates. All of the intermediates have the disulfide bond between Cys18 and 61 formed, indicating that formation of this disulfide is the first step in refolding. In order to further understand the refolding pathway, two intermediate froms, PIII with the additional disulfide Cys(6/47) formed and PIIIa with Cys(6/48) formed, were isolated. The oxidation of the remaining Cys48 and 52 in PIII and Cys47 and 52 in PIIIa would lead to PI and PII, respectively; however, air oxidation of these resulted in a rapid reshuffling into other intermediates as well as folding into the fully oxidized forms, and this occurred whether refolding was started with PIII or PIIIa. When oxidation occurred in the presence of an excess of oxidized glutathione, the predominant species generated were various glutathione adducts regardless of the initial intermediate form, indicating that formation of the last disulfide bond is not a favorable process relative to disulfide exchange when excess disulfides from oxidized glutathione are present. Interestingly, if 80 microM copper sulfate, an oxidant, is added to the refolding buffer, PIII resulted in formation of the PI form alone, whereas PIIIa resulted in the PII form alone. It was concluded from these results that the intermediate forms of IGF-1 can rapidly reshuffle between different disulfide structures, and that formation of the last disulfide bond is not as favorable a process as the conversion to other intermediates. The oxidation to form the last disulfide bond in PIII or PIIIa is accelerated and hence the interconversion to other intermediates is kinetically minimized only in the presence of copper sulfate. It appears, therefore, that the two intermediate forms, PIII and PIIIa, are the precursors of the corresponding fully oxidized forms, but their conversions are not energetically a favorable process.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9186491     DOI: 10.1006/abbi.1997.9996

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Biochem Biophys        ISSN: 0003-9861            Impact factor:   4.013


  7 in total

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7.  Peptide models of four possible insulin folding intermediates with two disulfides.

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  7 in total

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