Guanidine induced equilibrium and kinetic folding of a variant of green fluorescent protein (F99S/M153T/V163A, GFPuv) was studied. Using manual mixing and stopped-flow techniques, we combined different probes, including tryptophan fluorescence, chromophore fluorescence and reactivity with DTNB, to trace the spontaneous and TF-assisted folding of guanidine denatured GFPuv. We found that both unfolding and refolding of GFPuv occurred in a stepwise manner and a stable intermediate was populated under equilibrium conditions. The thermodynamic parameters obtained show that the intermediate state of GFPuv is quite compact compared to the denatured state and most of the green fluorescence is retained in this state. By studying GFPuv folding assisted by TF and a number of TF mutants, we found that wild-type TF catalyzes proline isomerization and accelerates the folding rate at low TF concentrations, but retards GFPuv folding and decelerates the folding rate at high TF concentrations. This reflects the two activities of TF, as an enzyme and as a chaperone. A general mechanism of TF assisted protein folding is discussed.
A simple and general method for disrupting chromosomal genes and introducing insertions is described. This procedure involves eliminating wild-type bacterial genes and introducing mutant alleles or other insertions at the original locus of the wild-type gene. To demonstrate the utility of this approach, the tig gene of Escherichia coli was replaced by homologous recombination with a cassette containing the chloramphenicol resistance gene and the sacB gene. The cassette was then removed and the tig mutant alleles were moved into the native tig location. Sequencing and Western blotting results demonstrated that insertions or deletions can be introduced precisely in E. coli using our approach. Our system does not require extra in vitro manipulations such as restriction digestion or ligation, and does not require use of specific plasmids or strains which are used to prevent false positive transformants caused by template plasmid transformation. This technique can be used widely in bacterial genome analysis.
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