Abstract
The folding of a 93-residue protein, the histidine-phospho-carrier protein of Streptomyces coelicolor, HPr, has been studied using several biophysical techniques, namely fluorescence, 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfate binding, circular dichroism, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, gel filtration chromatography and differential scanning calorimetry. The chemical-denaturation behaviour of HPr, followed by fluorescence, CD and gel filtration, at pH 7.5 and 25°C, is described as a two-state process, which does not involve the accumulation of thermodynamically stable intermediates. Its conformational stability under those conditions is ΔG = 4.0 ± 0.2 kcal·mol-1 (1 kcal = 4.18 kJ), which makes the HPr from S. coelicolor the most unstable member of the HPr family described so far. The stability of the protein does not change significantly from pH 7-9, as concluded from the differential scanning calorimetry and thermal CD experiments. Conformational studies at low pH (pH 2.5-4) suggest that, in the absence of cosmotropic agents, HPr does not unfold completely; rather, it accumulates partially folded species. The transition from those species to other states with native-like secondary and tertiary structure, occurs with a pKa = 3.3 ± 0.3, as measured by the averaged measurements obtained by CD and fluorescence. However, this transition does not agree either with: (a) that measured by burial of hydrophobic patches (8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfate binding experiments); or (b) that measured by acquisition of native-like compactness (gel-filtration studies). It seems that acquisition of native-like features occurs in a wide pH range and it cannot be ascribed to a unique side-chain titration. These series of intermediates have not been reported previously in any member of the HPr family.
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Fernández-Ballester, G., Maya, J., Martín, A., Parche, S., Gómez, J., Titgemeyer, F., & Neira, J. L. (2003). The histidine-phosphocarrier protein of Streptomyces coelicolor folds by a partially folded species at low pH. European Journal of Biochemistry, 270(10), 2254–2267. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1432-1033.2003.03594.x
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