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NMR characterization of three-disulfide variants of lysozyme, C64A/C80A, C76A/C94A, and C30A/C115A--a marginally stable state in folded proteins.

Authors :
Yokota A
Hirai K
Miyauchi H
Iimura S
Noda Y
Inoue K
Akasaka K
Tachibana H
Segawa S
Source :
Biochemistry [Biochemistry] 2004 Jun 01; Vol. 43 (21), pp. 6663-9.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Our earlier NMR study showed that a two-disulfide variant of hen lysozyme containing intra-alpha-domain disulfide bridges, C6-C127 and C30-C115, is partially folded, with the alpha domain tightly folded to the nativelike conformation and the beta domain flexible or unfolded. With a view that the formation of a third disulfide bridge is a key for the accomplishment of the overall chain fold, three-dimensional structures of three-disulfide variants of hen lysozyme lacking one disulfide bridge (C64A/C80A, C76A/C94A, and C30A/C115A) were studied in detail using NMR spectroscopy. Amide hydrogen exchange rates were measured to estimate the degree of conformational fluctuation in a residue-specific manner. The structure of C76A/C94A was found to be quite similar to that of the wild type, except for the peptide segment of residues 74-78. The structure of C64A/C80A was considerably disordered in the entire region of the loop (residues 62-79). Further, it was found that a network of hydrogen bonds within the beta sheet and the 3(10) helix in the beta domain were disrupted and fluctuating. In C30A/C115A, the D helix was unstructured and the interface of the B helix with the D helix was significantly perturbed. However, the structural disorder generated in the hydrophobic core of the alpha domain was prevented by the C helix from propagating toward the beta domain. A marginally stable state in folded proteins is discussed based on the structures remaining in each three-disulfide variant.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0006-2960
Volume :
43
Issue :
21
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15157100
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/bi049967w