Abstract

The crucial step of folding of recombinant proteins presents serious challenges to obtaining the native structure. This problem is exemplified by insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I which when refolded in vitro produces the native three-disulfide structure, an alternative structure with mispaired disulfide bonds and other isomeric forms. To investigate this phenomenon we have examined the refolding properties of an analog of IGF-I which contains a 13-amino acid N-terminal extension and a charge mutation at position 3 (Long-[Arg3]IGF-I). Unlike IGF-I, which yields 45% of the native structure and 24% of the alternative structure when refolded in vitro, Long-[Arg3]IGF-I yields 85% and 10% of these respective forms. To investigate the interactions that affect the refolding of Long-[Arg3]IGF-I and IGF-I, we acid-trapped folding intermediates and products for inclusion in a kinetic analysis of refolding. In addition to non-native intermediates, three native-like intermediates were identified, that appear to have a major role in the in vitro refolding pathway of Long-[Arg3]IGF-I; a single-disulfide Cys18-Cys61 intermediate, an intermediate with Cys18-Cys61 and Cys6-Cys48 disulfide bonds and another with Cys18-Cys61 and Cys47-Cys52 disulfide bonds. Furthermore, from our kinetic analysis we propose that the Cys18-Cys61, Cys6-Cys48 intermediate forms the native structure, not by the direct formation of the last (Cys47-Cys52) disulfide bond, but by rearrangement via the Cys18-Cys61 intermediate and a productive Cys18-Cys61, Cys47-Cys52 intermediate. In this pathway, the last disulfide bond to form involves Cys6 and Cys48. Finally, we apply this pathway to IGF-I and conclude that the divergence in the in vitro folding pathway of IGF-I is caused by non-native interactions involving Glu3 that stabilize the alternative structure.

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