Abstract
The structure and dynamics of equilibrium intermediate in the unfolding pathway of the human acidic fibroblast growth factor (hFGF-1) are investigated using a variety of biophysical techniques including multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. Guanidinium hydrochloride (GdnHCl)-induced unfolding of hFGF-1 proceeds with the accumulation of a stable intermediate state. The transition from the intermediate state to the unfolded state(s) is cooperative without the accumulation of additional intermediate(s). The intermediate state induced maximally in 0.96 m GdnHCl is found to be obligatory in the folding/unfolding pathway of hFGF-1. Most of the native tertiary structure interactions are preserved in the intermediate state. (1)H-(15)N chemical shift perturbation data suggest that the residues in the C-terminal segment including those located in the beta-strands IX, X, and XI undergo the most discernible structural change(s) in the intermediate state in 0.96 m GdnHCl. hFGF-1 in the intermediate state (0.96 m GdnHCl) does not bind to its ligand, sucrose octasulfate. Limited proteolytic digestion experiments and hydrogen-deuterium exchange monitored by (15)N heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectra show that the conformational flexibility of the protein in the intermediate state is significantly higher than in the native conformation. (15)N spin relaxation experiments show that many residues located in beta-strands IX, X, and XI exhibit conformational motions in the micro- to millisecond time scale. Analysis of (15)N relaxation data in conjunction with the amide proton exchange kinetics suggests that residues in the beta-strands II, VIII, and XII possibly constitute the stability core of the protein in the near-native intermediate state.
Highlights
Understanding the mechanism by which a disordered polypeptide chain folds to a unique three-dimensional structure is one of the major challenges in molecular structural biology [1,2,3,4]
Limited proteolytic digestion experiments and hydrogen-deuterium exchange monitored by 15N heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectra show that the conformational flexibility of the protein in the intermediate state is significantly higher than in the native conformation. 15N spin relaxation experiments show that many residues located in -strands IX, X, and XI exhibit conformational motions in the micro- to millisecond time scale
The Guanidinium hydrochloride (GdnHCl)-induced unfolding curves monitored by fluorescence and far-UV CD spectroscopy do not superimpose, implying that the unfolding process is non-cooperative, involving the accumulation of equilibrium intermediate state(s) (Fig. 2) (38, 46 –50)
Summary
Characterized an obligatory partially unfolded intermediate state in the GdnHCl unfolding pathway of hFGF-1. We investigate the structure and dynamic features of this obligatory intermediate state of hFGF-1 using a variety of techniques including multidimensional NMR
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