Abstract

The native state of human muscle acylphosphatase (AcP) presents two alpha-helices. In this study we have investigated folding and aggregation of a number of protein variants having mutations aimed at changing the propensity of these helical regions. Equilibrium and kinetic measurements of folding indicate that only helix-2, spanning residues 55-67, is largely stabilized in the transition state for folding therefore playing a relevant role in this process. On the contrary, the aggregation rate appears to vary only for the variants in which the propensity of the region corresponding to helix-1, spanning residues 22-32, is changed. Mutations that stabilize the first helix slow down the aggregation process while those that destabilize it increase the aggregation rate. AcP variants with the first helix destabilized aggregate with rates increased to different extents depending on whether the introduced mutations also alter the propensity to form beta-sheet structure. The fact that the first alpha-helix is important for aggregation and the second helix is important for folding indicates that these processes are highly specific. This partitioning does not reflect the difference in intrinsic alpha-helical propensities of the two helices, because helix-1 is the one presenting the highest propensity. Both processes of folding and aggregation do not therefore initiate from regions that have simply secondary structure propensities favorable for such processes. The identification of the regions involved in aggregation and the understanding of the factors that promote such a process are of fundamental importance to elucidate the principles by which proteins have evolved and for successful protein design.

Highlights

  • The role played by secondary structure in protein folding has been recently actively discussed [1,2,3]

  • In this study we have investigated folding and aggregation of a number of protein variants having mutations aimed at changing the propensity of these helical regions

  • The identification of the regions involved in aggregation and the understanding of the factors that promote such a process are of fundamental importance to elucidate the principles by which proteins have evolved and for successful protein design

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Summary

Introduction

The role played by secondary structure in protein folding has been recently actively discussed [1,2,3]. The rational design of mutations increasing the ␣-helical propensity of regions that are in ␣-helical conformation in the native state has been one of the most popular experimental strategies adopted to stabilize the native fold of several proteins (4 –7). In this report we investigate the role of regions corresponding to the two ␣-helices of AcP and of their propensity to form ␣-helical structure in folding and aggregation This provides an opportunity not just to explore the fundamentals of the two processes of folding and aggregation and to evaluate whether the two processes can be rationally decoupled by specific mutations, an aspect that has relevance for establishing the principles of successful protein design

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