Thermal, chemical and pH induced unfolding of turmeric root lectin: Modes of denaturation

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Abstract

Curcuma longa rhizome lectin, of non-seed origin having antifungal, antibacterial and a-glucosidase inhibitory activities, forms a homodimer with high thermal stability as well as acid tolerance. Size exclusion chromatography and dynamic light scattering show it to be a dimer at pH 7, but it converts to a monomer near pH 2. Circular dichroism spectra and fluorescence emission maxima are virtually indistinguishable from pH 7 to 2, indicating secondary and tertiary structures remain the same in dimer and monomer within experimental error. The tryptophan environment as probed by acrylamide quenching data yielded very similar data at pH 2 and pH 7, implying very similar folding for monomer and dimer. Differential scanning calorimetry shows a transition at 350.3 K for dimer and at 327.0 K for monomer. Thermal unfolding and chemical unfolding induced by guanidinium chloride for dimer are both reversible and can be described by two-state models. The temperatures and the denaturant concentrations at which one-half of the protein molecules are unfolded, are protein concentration-dependent for dimer but protein concentration-independent for monomer. The free energy of unfolding at 298 K was found to be 5.23 Kcal mol -1 and 14.90 Kcal mol -1 for the monomer and dimer respectively. The value of change in excess heat capacity upon protein denaturation (ΔC p) is 3.42 Kcal mol -1 K -1 for dimer. The small ΔC p for unfolding of CLA reflects a buried hydrophobic core in the folded dimeric protein. These unfolding experiments, temperature dependent circular dichroism and dynamic light scattering for the dimer at pH 7 indicate its higher stability than for the monomer at pH 2. This difference in stability of dimeric and monomeric forms highlights the contribution of inter-subunit interactions in the former. © 2014 Biswas, Chattopadhyaya.

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Biswas, H., & Chattopadhyaya, R. (2014). Thermal, chemical and pH induced unfolding of turmeric root lectin: Modes of denaturation. PLoS ONE, 9(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0103579

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