Abstract

Three of the five disulfide bonds in the glycoprotein hormone alpha-subunit (GPH-alpha) form a cystine knot motif that stabilizes a three-loop antiparallel structure. Previously, we described a mutant (alpha(k)) that contained only the three knot disulfide bonds and demonstrated that the cystine knot was necessary and sufficient for efficient GPH-alpha folding and secretion. In this study, we used alpha(k) as a model to study the intracellular GPH-alpha folding pathway. Cystine knot formation proceeded through a 1-disulfide intermediate that contained the 28-82 disulfide bond. Formation of disulfide bond 10-60, then disulfide bond 32-84, followed the formation of 28-82. Whether the two non-cystine knot bonds 7-31 and 59-87 could form independent of the knot was also tested. Disulfide bond 7-31 formed rapidly, whereas 59-87 did not form when all cysteine residues of the cystine knot were converted to alanine, suggesting that 7-31 forms early in the folding pathway and that 59-87 forms during or after cystine knot formation. Finally, loop 2 of GPH-alpha has been shown to be very flexible, suggesting that loop 2 does not actively drive GPH-alpha folding. To test this, we replaced residues 36-55 in the flexible loop 2 with an artificially flexible glycine chain. Consistent with our hypothesis, folding and secretion were unaffected when loop 2 was replaced with the glycine chain. Based on these findings, we describe a model for the intracellular folding pathway of GPH-alpha and discuss how these findings may provide insight into the folding mechanisms of other cystine knot-containing proteins.

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