Optical spectroscopy provides a wealth of information about protein structure that is difficult to obtain from other methods. Investigations of changes in primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structure are particularly well-suited for optical techniques such as UV absorption, circular dichroism, fluorescence, Raman and infrared spectroscopy, as well as light scattering methods. Each method has unique areas of applicability and contributes to structure determination in a different manner. The application of these methods is demonstrated with examples of studies performed on bovine growth hormone. Some of these include: determination of solution-state structure, monitoring differences between solution- and solid-state structure, determination of molecular size distribution, and investigations of protein folding mechanisms. It is demonstrated that by judicious choice of methods, a reasonably complete description of protein structure can be obtained.
Bovine growth hormone (bGH) forms a stable folding intermediate that aggregates at elevated concentrations (greater than 10 microM). Thermodynamic and kinetic studies have shown that the formation of this bGH folding intermediate and its aggregation are separate processes, implying that selective modifications of bGH can lead to their independent modulation. In addition, a bGH region that includes amino acid residues 109-133 appears to be directly involved in this aggregation process. Human growth hormone (hGH), which is unable to aggregate via this mechanism, differs from the bovine primary sequence at eight positions within this protein region. We have characterized the folding of a bGH analogue that contains the hGH sequence between amino acid residues 109-133 (8H-bGH) at low and high concentrations. The equilibrium folding characteristics of bGH and 8H-bGH are similar when monitored at low protein concentrations (less than or equal to 2 microM). The wild-type and analogue proteins have equivalent denaturation midpoints when equilibrium unfolding is monitored by the use of far-UV circular dichroism, second-derivative UV, or fluorescence. In addition, the enhanced fluorescence that is associated with the formation of the bGH monomeric folding intermediate (Havel, H. A., et al. (1988) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 955, 154-163) is observed for 8H-bGH under similar conditions. In contrast, partial denaturation of 8H-bGH at higher concentrations (greater than 2 microM) leads to significantly less aggregation than is observed for bGH. This result is obtained from near-UV CD spectroscopy, kinetic folding, size-exclusion chromatography, and dynamic light-scattering data.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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