Abstract

The effect of sulfhydryl oxidase on the rate of disulfide bond formation and polypeptide chain folding in reductively denatured chymotrypsinogen A has been investigated using an immobilized zymogen preparation and a cylindrical quartz flow-through fluorescence cell. Enzymatic oxidation of the 10 sulfhydryl groups in reduced chymotrypsinogen followed first order kinetics at pH 7.0 with an apparent first order rate constant governing sulfhydryl group disappearance of 4.2 × 10 −2 min −1. This provides a t 1 2 of 16.3 min for the sulfhydryl oxidase-catalyzed oxidation, whereas 165 min are required for nonenzymatic aerobic oxidation of one-half the sulfhydryl groups. Refolding of the reductively denatured polypeptide chains, monitored by changes in protein fluorescence, did not follow first order kinetics characteristic of a simple two-state mechanism, nor did the return of trypsin activatability. It appears that at least one intermediate must exist in such refolding, in both the uncatalyzed and sulfhydryl oxidase-catalyzed processes. Estimation of the rate constants governing refolding, assuming a single intermediate between the denatured and native states, provided values of 3 × 10 −2 min −1 and 7 × 10 −3 min −1 for uncatalyzed autoxidation and 4 × 10 −2 min −1 and 1.1 × 10 −2 min −1 for the sulfhydryl oxidase-catalyzed transition. Thus, enzymic catalysis of disulfide bond formation can lead to apparent catalysis of protein refolding as monitored both by fluorescence and by acquisition of biological function.

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