Thermophilic proteins and enzymes are attractive for use in industrial applications due to their resistance against heat and denaturants. Here, we report on a thermophilic protein that is stable at high temperatures (Ttrs, hot 67 °C) but undergoes significant unfolding at room temperature due to cold denaturation. Little is known about the cold denaturation of thermophilic proteins, although it can significantly limit their applications. We investigated the cold denaturation of thermophilic multidomain protein translation initiation factor 2 (IF2) from Thermus thermophilus. IF2 is a GTPase that binds to ribosomal subunits and initiator fMet-tRNAfMet during the initiation of protein biosynthesis. In the presence of 9 M urea, measurements in the far-UV region by circular dichroism were used to capture details about the secondary structure of full-length IF2 protein and its domains during cold and hot denaturation. Cold denaturation can be suppressed by salt, depending on the type, due to the decreased heat capacity. Thermodynamic analysis and mathematical modeling of the denaturation process showed that salts reduce the cooperativity of denaturation of the IF2 domains, which might be associated with the high frustration between domains. This characteristic of high interdomain frustration may be the key to satisfying numerous diverse contacts with ribosomal subunits, translation factors, and tRNA.
Protein aggregation is one of the most critical processes affecting protein solubility in various contexts-from protein therapeutics formulation to protein diseases. In general, time-dependent changes in protein solubility are complex kinetically driven processes that often involve a triggering event that consists of a protein unfolding/misfolding followed by the assembling of aggregationcompetent protein species. In this study, we have examined the relation between stability and time-dependent solubility of the recombinant human antibody light chain, hLC, which was found to form renal tubular casts in the multiple myeloma patient. To analyze the aggregation quantitatively, the hLC stability and protein solubility assays were performed in vitro at elevated temperatures. A differential acceleration of the processes at high temperatures enabled us to dissect observed kinetics of irreversible hLC unfolding and aggregation. We find that for hLC these processes have different molecularity and activation energy barriers. While the irreversible unfolding of hLC is a unimolecular step with a substantial activation energy barrier of 260 kJ/mol, the aggregation is rate-limited by the bimolecular reaction, which is characterized by a lower activation energy barrier of 40 kJ/mol. By the combination of experimental assays at different temperatures, different protein concentrations and kinetic modeling using ordinary differential equations, we were able to extrapolate time-dependent protein solubility to temperatures where both unfolding and aggregation processes are strongly kinetically coupled. Our study enables mechanism-based evaluation and interpretation of different physico-chemical factors contributing to the hLC unfolding and aggregation and their effect on the formation of extracellular protein deposits.
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