A near-native state on the slow refolding pathway of hen lysozyme
The refolding of four disulfide lysozyme (at pH 5.2, 20 °C) involves parallel pathways, which have been proposed to merge at a near-native state. This species contains stable structure in the α- and β-domains but lacks a functional active site. Although previous experiments have demonstrated that th...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Protein science 1999-01, Vol.8 (1), p.35-44 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The refolding of four disulfide lysozyme (at pH
5.2, 20 °C) involves parallel pathways, which have been
proposed to merge at a near-native state. This species
contains stable structure in the α- and β-domains
but lacks a functional active site. Although previous experiments
have demonstrated that the near-native state is populated
on the fast refolding pathway, its relevance to slow refolding
molecules could not be directly determined from previous
experiments. In this paper, we describe experiments that
investigate the effect of added salts on the refolding
pathway of lysozyme at pH 5.2, 20 °C. We show, using
stopped flow tryptophan fluorescence, inhibitor binding,
and circular dichroism (CD), that the rate of formation
of native lysozyme on the slow refolding track is significantly
reduced in solutions of high ionic strength in a manner
dependent on the position of the anion in the Hofmeister
series. By contrast, the rate of evolution of hydrogen
exchange (HX) protection monitored by electrospray ionization
mass spectrometry (ESI MS) is unchanged under the refolding
conditions studied. The data show, therefore, that at high
ionic strengths β-domain stabilization and native state
formation on the slow refolding pathway become kinetically
decoupled such that the near-native state becomes significantly
populated. Thus, by changing the energy landscape with
the addition of salts new insights into the relevance of
intermediate states in lysozyme refolding are revealed. |
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ISSN: | 0961-8368 1469-896X |
DOI: | 10.1110/ps.8.1.35 |