Thermal unfolding of ribonuclease T1 studied by multidimensional NMR spectroscopy

被引:10
作者
Matsuura, H
Shimotakahara, S
Sakuma, C
Tashiro, M
Shindo, H
Mochizuki, K
Yamagishi, A
Kojima, M
Takahashi, K [1 ]
机构
[1] Tokyo Univ Pharm & Life Sci, Sch Life Sci, Tokyo 1920392, Japan
[2] Tokyo Univ Pharm & Life Sci, Sch Pharm, Tokyo 1920392, Japan
[3] Tokyo Metropolitan Univ, Fac Sci, Dept Chem, Tokyo 1920397, Japan
关键词
nuclear magnetic resonance; residual structure; ribonuclease T1; singular value decomposition; thermal unfolding;
D O I
10.1515/BC.2004.149
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Thermal unfolding of ribonculease (RNase) T1 was studied by H-1 nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy (NOESY) and H-1-N-15 heteronuclear single-quantum coherence (HSQC) NMR spectroscopy at various temperatures. Native RNase T1 is a single-chain molecule of 104 amino acid residues, and has a single alpha-helix and two beta-sheets, A and B, which consist of two and five strands, respectively. Singular value decomposition analysis based on temperature-dependent HSQC, spectra revealed that the thermal unfolding of RNase T1 can be described by a two-state transition model. The midpoint temperature and the change in enthalpy were determined as 54.0degreesC and 696 kJ/mol, respectively, which are consistent with results obtained by other methods. To analyze the transition profile in more detail, we investigated local structural changes using temperature-dependent NOE intensities. The results indicate that the helical region starts to unfold at lower temperature than some beta-strands (B3, B4, and B5 in beta-sheet B). These beta-strands correspond to the hydrophobic cluster region, which had been expected to be a folding core. This was confirmed by structure calculations using the residual NOEs observed at 56degreesC. Thus, the two-state transition of RNase T1 appears to involve locally different conformational changes.
引用
收藏
页码:1157 / 1164
页数:8
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]   A protein folding intermediate of ribonuclease T1 characterized at high resolution by 1D and 2D real-time NMR spectroscopy [J].
Balbach, J ;
Steegborn, C ;
Schindler, T ;
Schmid, FX .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1999, 285 (02) :829-842
[2]   NATURAL ABUNDANCE N-15 NMR BY ENHANCED HETERONUCLEAR SPECTROSCOPY [J].
BODENHAUSEN, G ;
RUBEN, DJ .
CHEMICAL PHYSICS LETTERS, 1980, 69 (01) :185-189
[3]  
Brunger A.T., 1992, X-Plor Manual Version 3.1
[4]   NMRPIPE - A MULTIDIMENSIONAL SPECTRAL PROCESSING SYSTEM BASED ON UNIX PIPES [J].
DELAGLIO, F ;
GRZESIEK, S ;
VUISTER, GW ;
ZHU, G ;
PFEIFER, J ;
BAX, A .
JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR NMR, 1995, 6 (03) :277-293
[5]   RIBONUCLEASES IN TAKA-DIASTASE - PROPERTIES, CHEMICAL NATURE, AND APPLICATIONS [J].
EGAMI, F ;
TAKAHASHI, K ;
UCHIDA, T .
PROGRESS IN NUCLEIC ACID RESEARCH AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1964, 3 :59-101
[6]   COMPARISON OF THE BACKBONE DYNAMICS OF A FOLDED AND AN UNFOLDED SH3 DOMAIN EXISTING IN EQUILIBRIUM IN AQUEOUS BUFFER [J].
FARROW, NA ;
ZHANG, OW ;
FORMANKAY, JD ;
KAY, LE .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1995, 34 (03) :868-878
[7]   Characterisation of urea-denatured states of an immunoglobulin superfamily domain by heteronuclear NMR [J].
Fong, S ;
Bycroft, M ;
Clarke, J ;
Freund, SMV .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1998, 278 (02) :417-429
[8]  
GOHDA K, 1994, J BIOL CHEM, V269, P17531
[9]   Determination of the NMR structure of Gln25-ribonuclease T1 [J].
Hatano, K ;
Kojima, M ;
Suzuki, E ;
Tanokura, M ;
Takahashi, K .
BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2003, 384 (08) :1173-1183
[10]   SPECIFIC PROTEIN-NUCLEIC ACID RECOGNITION IN RIBONUCLEASE-T1-2'-GUANYLIC ACID COMPLEX - AN X-RAY STUDY [J].
HEINEMANN, U ;
SAENGER, W .
NATURE, 1982, 299 (5878) :27-31