GdmCl-, urea-, and pH-induced unfolding pathways of bovine carbonic anhydrase II have been analyzed by using changes induced by different denaturing agents in intensity, anisotropy, life time, and parameter A value of intrinsic fluorescence as well as intensity and life time of ANS (ammonium salt of 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid) fluorescence. The formation of several stable unfolding intermediates, some of which were not observed previously, has been established. This was further confirmed by representation of fluorescence data in terms of a "phase diagram", that is, I(lambda1) versus I(lambda2) dependence, where I(lambda1) and I(lambda2) are the fluorescence intensity values measured at wavelengths lambda(1) and lambda(2), respectively.
Steady-state and time-resolved intrinsic fluorescence, fluorescence quenching by acrylamide, and surface testing by hydrophobic label ANS were used to study the structure of inactivated alpha-actin. The results are discussed together with that of earlier experiments on sedimentation, anisotropy of fluorescence, and CD spectrum in the near- and far-UV regions. A dramatic increase in ANS binding to inactivated actin in comparison with native and unfolded protein indicates that the inactivated actin has solvent-exposed hydrophobic clusters on the surface. It results in specific association of actin macromolecules (sedimentation constants for native and inactivated actin are 3 and 20 S, respectively) and, consequently, in irreversibility of native-inactivated actin transition. It was found that, though the fluorescence spectrum of inactivated actin is red-shifted, the efficiency of the acrylamide collision quenching is even lower than that of the intact protein. It suggests that tryptophan residues of inactivated actin are located in the inner region of protein formed by polar groups, which are highly packed. It correlates with the pronounced near-UV CD spectrum of inactivated actin. The experimentally found tryptophan fluorescence lifetimes allowed evaluation rotational correlation times on the basis of Perrin plots. It is found that oscillations of tryptophan residues in inactivated actin are restricted in comparison with native one. The inactivated actin properties were invariant with experimental conditions (ionic strength, the presence of reducing agents), the way of inactivation (Ca2+ and/or ATP removal, heating, 3-5 M urea or 1.5 M GdmCl treatment), and protein concentration (within the limits 0.005-1.0 mg/mL). The same state of actin appears on the refolding from the completely unfolded state. Thermodynamic stability, pronounced secondary structure, and the existing hydrophobic clusters, tested by ANS fluorescence and reversibility of transition inactivated-unfolded forms, allowed us to suggest that inactivated actin can be intermediate in the folding-unfolding pathway.
The kinetics of actin unfolding induced by guanidine hydrochloride of different concentrations was studied. The parametric representation of the kinetic dependencies of tryptophan fluorescence intensity changes recorded at two wavelengths allowed us to detect and characterize a new essentially unfolded kinetic intermediate. Its characteristics suggested that this intermediate state is a premolten globule. It was shown that the equilibrium transition between inactivated and completely unfolded states is also a two-step process and proceeds via an essentially unfolded kinetic intermediate. The new kinetic pathway of actin unfolding--refolding was proposed. According to it, the founded essentially unfolded kinetic state is the on-pathway intermediate, while inactivated actin is the off-pathway misfolded state stabilized by aggregation of partially folded macromolecules of protein.
The kinetics of actin unfolding induced by guanidine hydrochloride has been studied. On the basis of obtained experimental data a new kinetic pathway of actin unfolding was proposed. We have shown that the transition from native to inactivated actin induced by guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) passes through essential unfolding of the protein. This means that inactivated actin should be considered as the off-pathway species rather than an intermediate conformation between native and completely unfolded states of actin, as has been assumed earlier. The rate constants of the transitions that give rise to the inactivated actin were determined. At 1.0-2.0 M GdnHCl the value of the rate constant of the transition from native to essentially unfolded actin exceeds that of the following step of inactivated actin formation. It leads to the accumulation of essentially unfolded macromolecules early in the unfolding process, which in turn causes the minimum in the time dependencies of tryptophan fluorescence intensity, parameter A, characterizing the intrinsic fluorescence spectrum position, and tryptophan fluorescence anisotropy.
The propensity to associate or aggregate is one of the characteristic properties of many nonnative proteins. The aggregation of proteins is responsible for a number of human diseases and is a significant problem in biotechnology. Despite this, little is currently known about the effect of self-association on the structural properties and conformational stability of partially folded protein molecules. G-actin is shown to form equilibrium unfolding intermediate in the vicinity of 1.5 M guanidinium chloride (GdmCl). Refolding from the GdmCl unfolded state is terminated at the stage of formation of the same intermediate state. An analogous form, known as inactivated actin, can be obtained by heat treatment, or at moderate urea concentration, or by the release of Ca(2+). In all cases actin forms specific associates comprising partially folded protein molecules. The structural properties and conformational stability of inactivated actin were studied over a wide range of protein concentrations, and it was established that the process of self-association is rather specific. We have also shown that inactivated actin, being denatured, is characterized by a relatively rigid microenvironment of aromatic residues and exhibits a considerable limitation in the internal mobility of tryptophans. This means that specific self-association can play an important structure-forming role for the partially folded protein molecules.
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