Abstract

Experimental studies of protein stability often rely on the determination of an "m value", which describes the denaturant dependence of the free energy change between two states (DeltaG = DeltaG(H2O) - m[denaturant]). Changes in the m value accompanying site specific mutations are usually attributed to structural alterations in the native or unfolded ensemble. Here, we provide an example of significant reduction in the m value resulting from a subtle deviation in two-state behavior not detected by traditional methods. The protein that is studied is a variant of Escherchia coli RNase H in which three residues predicted to be involved in a partially buried salt bridge network were mutated to alanine (R46A, D102A, and D148A). Equilibrium denaturant profiles monitored by both fluorescence and circular dichroism appeared to be cooperative, and a two-state analysis yielded a DeltaG(UN) of approximately -3 kcal/mol with an m value of 1.4 kcal mol(-1) M(-1) (vs 2.3 for RNase H). Analysis of kinetic refolding experiments suggests that the system is actually three-state at equilibrium with an appreciable concentration of an intermediate state under low denaturant concentrations. The stability of the native state determined from a fit of these kinetic data is -6.7 kcal/mol, suggesting that the stability determined by traditional two-state equilibrium analysis is a gross underestimate. The only hint to this loss of two-state behavior was a decrease in the apparent m value, and the presence of the equilibrium intermediate was only identified by a kinetic analysis. Our work serves as a cautionary note; the possibility of a three-state system should be closely addressed before interpreting a change in the m value as a change in the native or unfolded state.

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