Context dependence of protein secondary structure formation: the three-dimensional structure and stability of a hybrid between chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 and helix E from subtilisin Carlsberg
Författare
Summary, in English
The loop region of chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 from barley has been employed as a scaffold for testing the intrinsic propensity of a peptide fragment to form a secondary structure. The helix formation of the nine amino acid residue segment Lys-Gln- Ala-Val- Asp- Asn- Ala-Tyr-Ala of helix E from subtilisin Carlsberg has been studied by the construction of a hybrid consisting of chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2) where part of the active loop has been replaced by the nonapeptide. An expression system for a truncated form of C12 where the 19 structureless residues of the N-terminus have been removed and Leu20 replaced
by methionyl was constructed from the entire 83-residue wild-type C12 gene by polymerase chain reaction
methodology. The gene encoding the hybrid was constructed from the truncated inhibitor gene. The stability of the truncated inhibitor and of the hybrid toward guanidinium chloride denaturation was examined. From these measurements, the energy of unfolding in pure water was extrapolated to 30.5 1.0 kJ/mol for the truncated inhibitor and 10.9 f 0.3 kJ/mol for the hybrid. These energies show that the stability of C12 is unaffected by the N-terminal truncation but severely decreased by the loop mutations. The three-dimensional structure of the hybrid protein has been determined in solution by nuclear magnetic
resonance spectroscopy using 893 distance restraints and 84 torsional angle restraints. The average rootmean-square deviation (rmsd) of 15 structures compared to their geometrical average was 0.8 f 0.2 A for heavy backbone atoms and 1.3 * 0.2 A for all heavy atoms. The inserted peptide segment does not form an a-helix in the new structural context whereas the structure of the C12 scaffold turns out to be amazingly conserved.
by methionyl was constructed from the entire 83-residue wild-type C12 gene by polymerase chain reaction
methodology. The gene encoding the hybrid was constructed from the truncated inhibitor gene. The stability of the truncated inhibitor and of the hybrid toward guanidinium chloride denaturation was examined. From these measurements, the energy of unfolding in pure water was extrapolated to 30.5 1.0 kJ/mol for the truncated inhibitor and 10.9 f 0.3 kJ/mol for the hybrid. These energies show that the stability of C12 is unaffected by the N-terminal truncation but severely decreased by the loop mutations. The three-dimensional structure of the hybrid protein has been determined in solution by nuclear magnetic
resonance spectroscopy using 893 distance restraints and 84 torsional angle restraints. The average rootmean-square deviation (rmsd) of 15 structures compared to their geometrical average was 0.8 f 0.2 A for heavy backbone atoms and 1.3 * 0.2 A for all heavy atoms. The inserted peptide segment does not form an a-helix in the new structural context whereas the structure of the C12 scaffold turns out to be amazingly conserved.
Avdelning/ar
Publiceringsår
1993
Språk
Engelska
Sidor
11007-11014
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Biochemistry
Volym
32
Issue
41
Dokumenttyp
Artikel i tidskrift
Förlag
The American Chemical Society (ACS)
Ämne
- Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Status
Published
Forskningsgrupp
- Molecular Endocrinology
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISSN: 0006-2960