1. Salt-induced folding of alkaline denatured creatine kinase under high pH conditions.
- Author
-
Yang HP, Zhong HN, Li S, and Zhou HM
- Subjects
- Anilino Naphthalenesulfonates metabolism, Animals, Fluorescent Dyes metabolism, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Muscles enzymology, Protein Conformation, Protein Denaturation, Rabbits, Salts, Sodium Hydroxide, Spectrometry, Fluorescence, Creatine Kinase chemistry
- Abstract
The conformational changes of creatine kinase during alkaline unfolding and salt-induced folding at high pH have been followed by fluorescence emission and circular dichroism spectra. The results obtained show that at low ionic strength, with increasing pH value, creatine kinase denatured gradually to reach the ultimate unfolded conformation in the vicinity of pH 12.7. With the increase of pH from 9.0 to 12.7, the fluorescence emission maximum red shifted from 337 to 355 nm, indicating complete exposure of the buried tryptophan residues to the solvent. The far-UV CD spectra show that even at pH 12.7, the apparently fully denatured enzyme retains a great part of ordered secondary structure. At pH 12.7 by adding the salt, the relatively unfolded state of denatured enzyme changes into a compact conformational state by hydrophobic collapsing. Folded state induced by salt bound ANS strongly, indicating the existence of increased hydrophobic surface. The above results suggest that the salt-induced folded state at high pH may be the folded intermediate which exists in the general protein folding, and the larger residual ordered secondary structure might become folded being point on the salt-induced folding.
- Published
- 1997
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