Back to Search Start Over

An engineered amino-terminal domain of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase with native-like structure.

Authors :
Sherman MA
Chen Y
Mas MT
Source :
Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society [Protein Sci] 1997 Apr; Vol. 6 (4), pp. 882-91.
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

Previous studies have suggested that the carboxy-terminal peptide (residues 401-415) and interdomain helix (residues 185-199) of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase, a two-domain enzyme, play a role in the folding and stability of the amino-terminal domain (residues 1-184). A deletion mutant has been created in which the carboxy-terminal peptide is attached to the amino-terminal domain (residues 1-184) plus interdomain helix (residues 185-199) through a flexible peptide linker, thus eliminating the carboxy-terminal domain entirely. CD, fluorescence, gel filtration, and NMR experiments indicated that, unlike versions described previously, this isolated N-domain is soluble, monomeric, compactly folded, native-like in structure, and capable of binding the substrate 3-phosphoglycerate with high affinity in a saturable manner. The midpoint of the guanidine-induced unfolding transition was the same as that of the native two-domain protein (Cm approximately 0.8 M). The free energy change associated with guanidine-induced unfolding was one-third that of the native enzyme, in agreement with previous studies that evaluated the intrinsic stability of the N-domain and the contribution of domain-domain interactions to the stability of PGK. These observations suggest that the C-terminal peptide and interdomain helix are sufficient for maintaining a native-like fold of the N-domain in the absence of the C-domain.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0961-8368
Volume :
6
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9098898
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.5560060415