The Folding Energy Landscape of MerP

This thesis is based on studies, described in four papers, in which the folding energy landscape of MerP was investigated by various techniques. MerP is a water-soluble 72 amino acid protein with a secondary structure consisting of four anti-parallel β-strands and two α-helices on one side of the sh...

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Main Author: Brorsson, Ann-Christin
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Umeå universitet, Kemiska institutionen 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-309
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-7305-710-X
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-umu-3092017-10-17T05:23:59ZThe Folding Energy Landscape of MerPengBrorsson, Ann-ChristinUmeå universitet, Kemiska institutionenUmeå : Kemi2004Biochemistryprotein folding and stabilityhydrogen exchangeintermediatepartial unfoldingBiokemiBiochemistry and Molecular BiologyBiokemi och molekylärbiologiThis thesis is based on studies, described in four papers, in which the folding energy landscape of MerP was investigated by various techniques. MerP is a water-soluble 72 amino acid protein with a secondary structure consisting of four anti-parallel β-strands and two α-helices on one side of the sheet in the order β1α1β2β3α2β4. The first paper describes the use of CD and fluorescence analysis to examine the folding/unfolding process of MerP. From these experiments it was found that the protein folds according to a two-state model in which only the native and unfolded forms are populated without any visible intermediates. With a rate constant of 1.2 s-1, the folding rate was found to be unusually slow for a protein of this size. The studies presented in the second and third papers were based on measurements of native-state amide proton exchange at different temperatures (Paper II) and GuHCl concentrations (Paper III) in the pre-transitional region. In these studies partially unfolded forms were found for MerP which are essentially unrelated to each other. Thus, in the folding energy landscape of MerP, several intermediates seem to occur on different folding trajectories that are parallel to each other. The slow folding rate of MerP might be coupled to extensive visitation of these conformations. Hydrogen exchange in MerP did also reveal structure-dependent differences in compactness between the denatured states in GuHCl and H2O. In the last paper multivariate data analysis was applied to 2-dimensional NMR data to detect conformational changes in the structure of MerP induced by GuHCl. From this analysis it was suggested that regions involved in the most flexible part of the protein structure are disrupted at rather low denaturant concentrations (< 2.1 M GuHCl) while the native structures of the most stable parts are still not completely ruptured at 2.9 M GuHCl. Finally, the stability, kinetics, contact order and folding nuclei of six proteins with similar topology (MerP, U1A, S6, ADA2h, AcP and HPr) were compared. In this analysis it was found that their folding properties are quite diverse, despite their topological similarities, and no general rules that have been formulated yet can adequately predict their folding behaviour. Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-309urn:isbn:91-7305-710-Xapplication/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Biochemistry
protein folding and stability
hydrogen exchange
intermediate
partial unfolding
Biokemi
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Biokemi och molekylärbiologi
spellingShingle Biochemistry
protein folding and stability
hydrogen exchange
intermediate
partial unfolding
Biokemi
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Biokemi och molekylärbiologi
Brorsson, Ann-Christin
The Folding Energy Landscape of MerP
description This thesis is based on studies, described in four papers, in which the folding energy landscape of MerP was investigated by various techniques. MerP is a water-soluble 72 amino acid protein with a secondary structure consisting of four anti-parallel β-strands and two α-helices on one side of the sheet in the order β1α1β2β3α2β4. The first paper describes the use of CD and fluorescence analysis to examine the folding/unfolding process of MerP. From these experiments it was found that the protein folds according to a two-state model in which only the native and unfolded forms are populated without any visible intermediates. With a rate constant of 1.2 s-1, the folding rate was found to be unusually slow for a protein of this size. The studies presented in the second and third papers were based on measurements of native-state amide proton exchange at different temperatures (Paper II) and GuHCl concentrations (Paper III) in the pre-transitional region. In these studies partially unfolded forms were found for MerP which are essentially unrelated to each other. Thus, in the folding energy landscape of MerP, several intermediates seem to occur on different folding trajectories that are parallel to each other. The slow folding rate of MerP might be coupled to extensive visitation of these conformations. Hydrogen exchange in MerP did also reveal structure-dependent differences in compactness between the denatured states in GuHCl and H2O. In the last paper multivariate data analysis was applied to 2-dimensional NMR data to detect conformational changes in the structure of MerP induced by GuHCl. From this analysis it was suggested that regions involved in the most flexible part of the protein structure are disrupted at rather low denaturant concentrations (< 2.1 M GuHCl) while the native structures of the most stable parts are still not completely ruptured at 2.9 M GuHCl. Finally, the stability, kinetics, contact order and folding nuclei of six proteins with similar topology (MerP, U1A, S6, ADA2h, AcP and HPr) were compared. In this analysis it was found that their folding properties are quite diverse, despite their topological similarities, and no general rules that have been formulated yet can adequately predict their folding behaviour.
author Brorsson, Ann-Christin
author_facet Brorsson, Ann-Christin
author_sort Brorsson, Ann-Christin
title The Folding Energy Landscape of MerP
title_short The Folding Energy Landscape of MerP
title_full The Folding Energy Landscape of MerP
title_fullStr The Folding Energy Landscape of MerP
title_full_unstemmed The Folding Energy Landscape of MerP
title_sort folding energy landscape of merp
publisher Umeå universitet, Kemiska institutionen
publishDate 2004
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-309
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-7305-710-X
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