The experimental folding landscape of monomeric lactose repressor, a large two-domain protein, involves two kinetic intermediates

被引:24
作者
Wilson, CJ
Das, P
Clementi, C
Matthews, KS
Wittung-Stafshede, P
机构
[1] Rice Univ, Dept Biochem & Cell Biol, Houston, TX 77251 USA
[2] Rice Univ, Keck Ctr Struct Computat Biol, Houston, TX 77251 USA
[3] Rice Univ, Dept Chem, Houston, TX 77251 USA
关键词
folding intermediate; stopped-flow kinetics; topology;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0505808102
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
To probe the experimental folding behavior of a large protein with complex topology, we created a monomeric variant of the lactose repressor protein (MLAc), a well characterized tetrameric protein that regulates transcription of the lac operon. Purified MLAc is folded, fully functional, and binds the inducer isopropyl beta-(D)-thiogalactoside with the same affinity as wild-type Lacl. Equilibrium unfolding of MLAc induced by the chemical denaturant urea is a reversible, apparent two-state process (pH 7.5, 20 degrees C). However, time-resolved experiments demonstrate that unfolding is single-exponential, whereas refolding data indicate two transient intermediates. The data reveal the initial formation of a burst-phase (tau < ms) intermediate that corresponds to approximate to 50% of the total secondary-structure content. This step is followed by a rearrangement reaction that is rate-limited by an unfolding process (tau approximate to 3 s; pH 7.5, 20 degrees C) and results in a second intermediate. This MLAc intermediate converts to the native structure (tau approximate to 30 s; pH 7.5, 200 degrees C). Remarkably, the experimental folding-energy landscape for MLAc is in excellent agreement with theoretical predictions using a simple topology-based C-model as presented in a companion article in this issue.
引用
收藏
页码:14563 / 14568
页数:6
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