Abstract

The effect of n-propanol on the secondary and tertiary structure of human apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), an interfacial protein, was investigated using near and far ultraviolet (UV)-circular dichroism (CD) and fluorescence spectroscopy, as well as limited proteolytic digestion with trypsin, and cross-linking with bis(sulfosuccinimidyl) suberate. The structure of apoA-I in n-propanol (30%, v/v) was compared with that in Tris buffer and in reconstituted, spherical or discoidal, high density lipoproteins (rHDL). Addition of n-propanol to apoA-I in Tris buffer induces major changes in its near and far CD spectra: α-helical content increases by 27% and the near UV-CD spectrum becomes very similar to that of apoA-I in rHDL particles. Fluorescence spectral, lifetime, and polarization results, and quenching by KI confirm that major structural changes occur in the N-terminal half of apoA-I as n-propanol is added: the Trp residues become more exposed to solvent than in buffer alone or in rHDL. Higher concentrations of guanidine hydrochloride or urea are required to denature apoA-I in n-propanol than in buffer alone, but a similar free energy of unfolding is observed. The N-terminus of apoA-I is relatively resistant to trypsin digestion and the C-terminus has equivalent digestion sites for apoA-I in the three states, but the kinetics of digestion are much slower in n-propanol and in rHDL compared to apoA-I in Tris buffer. Cross-linking experiments reveal that dimers of apoA-I exist in n-propanol, in contrast to dimers plus multimeric aggregates in Tris buffer. From these results we conclude that in 30% n-propanol the structure of apoA-I approaches that of ‘native’ lipid-bound apoA-I, in contrast to its structure in the aqueous Tris buffer.

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