Abstract
Human alpha-lactalbumin (alpha-LA) is a four disulfide-bonded protein that adopts partially structured conformations under a variety of mildly denaturing conditions. At low pH, the protein is denatured but compact, with a high degree of secondary structure and a native-like fold. This is commonly referred to as a molten globule. A variant of alpha-LA, in which all eight cysteines have been mutated to alanine (all-Ala alpha-LA), has been studied using NMR spectroscopy. At low pH all-Ala alpha-LA is nearly as compact as wild type alpha-LA. Urea-induced unfolding experiments reveal that the residues that remain compact in the absence of disulfide bonds are those that are most resistant to unfolding in the wild-type alpha-LA molten globule. This is particularly remarkable because this stable core is formed by segments of the polypeptide chain from both the N- and C-termini. These results show that the overall architecture of the protein fold of alpha-LA is determined by the polypeptide sequence itself, and not as the result of cross-linking by disulfide bonds, and provide insight into the way in which the sequence codes for the fold.
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