Two exposed amino acid residues confer thermostability on a cold shock protein

Thermophilic organisms produce proteins of exceptional stability. To understand protein thermostability at the molecular level we studied a pair of cold shock proteins, one of mesophilic and one of thermophilic origin, by systematic mutagenesis. Although the two proteins differ in sequence at 12 pos...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature Structural Biology 2000-05, Vol.7 (5), p.380-383
Hauptverfasser: Perl, Dieter, Mueller, Uwe, Heinemann, Udo, Schmid, Franz X.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Thermophilic organisms produce proteins of exceptional stability. To understand protein thermostability at the molecular level we studied a pair of cold shock proteins, one of mesophilic and one of thermophilic origin, by systematic mutagenesis. Although the two proteins differ in sequence at 12 positions, two surface-exposed residues are responsible for the increase in stability of the thermophilic protein (by 15.8 kJ mol −1 at 70 °C). 11.5 kJ mol −1 originate from a predominantly electrostatic contribution of Arg 3 and 5.2 kJ mol −1 from hydrophobic interactions of Leu 66 at the carboxy terminus. The mesophilic protein could be converted to a highly thermostable form by changing the Glu residues at positions 3 and 66 to Arg and Leu, respectively. The variation of surface residues may thus provide a simple and powerful approach for increasing the thermostability of a protein.
ISSN:1072-8368
1545-9993
1545-9985
DOI:10.1038/75151