Literature DB >> 9806942

Probing the folding pathway of a beta-clam protein with single-tryptophan constructs.

P L Clark1, B F Weston, L M Gierasch.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cellular retinoic acid binding protein I (CRABPI) is a small, predominantly beta-sheet protein with a simple architecture and no disulfides or cofactors. Folding of mutants containing only one of the three native tryptophans has been examined using stopped-flow fluorescence and circular dichroism at multiple wavelengths.
RESULTS: Within 10 ms, the tryptophan fluorescence of all three mutants shows a blue shift, and stopped-flow circular dichroism shows significant secondary structure content. The local environment of Trp7, a completely buried residue located near the intersection of the N and C termini, develops on a 100 ms time scale. Spectral signatures of the other two tryptophan residues (87 and 109) become native-like in a 1 s kinetic phase.
CONCLUSIONS: Formation of the native beta structure of CRABPI is initiated by rapid hydrophobic collapse, during which local segments of chain adopt significant secondary structure. Subsequently, transient yet specific interactions of amino acid residues restrict the arrangement of the chain topology and initiate long-range associations such as the docking of the N and C termini. The development of native tertiary environments, including the specific packing of the beta-sheet sidechains, occurs in a final, highly cooperative step simultaneous with stable interstrand hydrogen bonding.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9806942     DOI: 10.1016/s1359-0278(98)00053-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fold Des        ISSN: 1359-0278


  24 in total

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8.  Kinetic versus thermodynamic control of mutational effects on protein homeostasis: A perspective from computational modeling and experiment.

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9.  Early folding events protect aggregation-prone regions of a β-rich protein.

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10.  Transporter-to-trap conversion: a disulfide bond formation in cellular retinoic acid binding protein I mutant triggered by retinoic acid binding irreversibly locks the ligand inside the protein.

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