Publication | Open Access
Direct Kinetic Evidence for Folding via a Highly Compact, Misfolded State
17
Citations
40
References
1999
Year
Protein AssemblyMolecular BiologyFoldable StructureProtein Phase SeparationProtein RefoldingTransient MisfoldingMisfolded StateProtein FoldingHighly CompactMolecular KineticsBiophysicsProtein ChemistryPhysicsBiochemistryDirect Kinetic EvidenceConformational StudyQuantum ChemistrySunflower Albumin 8Structural BiologyNatural SciencesSelf-assemblySurface Hydrophobic PatchMolecular BiophysicsMedicine
The 2 S seed storage protein, sunflower albumin 8 (SFA-8), contains an unusually high proportion of hydrophobic residues including 16 methionines (some of which may form a surface hydrophobic patch) in a disulfide cross-linked, alpha-helical structure. Circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy show that SFA-8 is highly stable to denaturation by heating or chaotropic agents, the latter resulting in a reversible two-state unfolding transition. The small m(U) (-4.7 M(-1) at 10 degrees C) and DeltaC(p) (-0.95 kcal mol(-1) K(-1)) values indicate that relatively little nonpolar surface of the protein is exposed during unfolding. Commensurate with the unusual distribution of hydrophobic residues, stopped-flow fluorescence data show that the folding pathway of SFA-8 is highly atypical, in that the initial product of the rapid collapse phase of folding is a compact nonnative state (or collection of nonnative states) that must unfold before acquiring the native conformation. The inhibited folding reaction of SFA-8, in which the misfolded state (m(M) = -0.95 M(-1) at 10 degrees C) is more compact than the transition state for folding (m(T) = -2.5 M(-1) at 10 degrees C), provides direct kinetic evidence for the transient misfolding of a protein.
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