Sökning: WFRF:(Hammarström Per)
> (2000-2004) >
Protein compactness...
Protein compactness measured by fluorescence resonance energy transfer - Human carbonic anhydrase II Is considerably expanded by the interaction of GroEL
-
- Hammarström, Per (författare)
- Linköpings universitet,Tekniska högskolan,Biokemi
-
- Persson, Malin (författare)
- Linköpings universitet,Tekniska högskolan,Institutionen för fysik, kemi och biologi
-
- Carlsson, Uno (författare)
- Linköpings universitet,Tekniska högskolan,Biokemi
-
(creator_code:org_t)
- 2001
- 2001
- Engelska.
-
Ingår i: Journal of Biological Chemistry. - 0021-9258 .- 1083-351X. ; 276:24, s. 21765-21775
- Relaterad länk:
-
https://urn.kb.se/re...
Abstract
Ämnesord
Stäng
- Nine single-cysteine mutants were labeled with 5-(2-iodoacetylaminoethylamino)naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid, an efficient acceptor of Trp fluorescence in fluorescence resonance energy transfer. The ratio between the fluorescence intensity of the 5-(2-acetylaminoethylamino)naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (AEDANS) moiety excited at 295 nm (Trp absorption) and 350 nn (direct AEDANS absorption) was used to estimate the average distances between the seven Trp residues in human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) and the AEDANS label, Guanidine HCl denaturation of the HCA II variants was also performed to obtain a curve that reflected the compactness of the protein at various stages of the unfolding, which could serve as a scale of the expansion of the protein. This approach was developed in this study and was used to estimate the compactness of HCA II during heat denaturation and interaction with GroEL, It was shown that thermally induced unfolding of HCA II proceeded only to the molten globule state. Reaching this state was sufficient to allow HCA II to bind to GroEL, and the volume of the molten globule intermediate increased similar to2.2-fold compared with that of the native state. GroEL-bound HCA II expands to a volume three to four times that of the native state (to similar to 117,000 Angstrom (3)), which correlates well with a stretched and loosened-up HCA II molecule in an enlarged GroEL cavity, Recently, we found that HCA II binding causes such an inflation of the GroEL molecule, and this probably represents the mechanism by which GroEL actively stretches its protein substrates apart (Hammarstrom, P., Persson, M., Owenius, R., Lindgren, M., and Carlsson, U. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 22832-22838), thereby facilitating rearrangement of misfolded structure.
Nyckelord
- TECHNOLOGY
- TEKNIKVETENSKAP
Publikations- och innehållstyp
- ref (ämneskategori)
- art (ämneskategori)
Hitta via bibliotek
Till lärosätets databas