Abstract

In vitro folding of mature subtilisin is extremely slow. The isolated pro-domain greatly accelerates in vitro folding of subtilisin in a bimolecular reaction whose product is a tight complex between folded subtilisin and folded pro-domain. In our studies of subtilisin, we are trying to answer two basic questions: why does subtilisin fold slowly without the pro-domain and what does the pro-domain do to accelerate the folding rate? To address these general questions, we are trying to characterize all the rate constants governing individual steps in the bimolecular folding reaction of pro-domain with subtilisin. Here, we report the results of a series of in vitro folding experiments using an engineered pro-domain mutant which is independently stable (proR9) and two calcium-free subtilisin mutants. The bimolecular folding reaction of subtilisin and proR9 occurs in two steps: an initial binding of proR9 to unfolded subtilisin, followed by isomerization of the initial complex into the native complex. The central findings are as follows. First, the independently stable proR9 folds subtilisin much faster than the predominantly unfolded wild-type pro-domain. Second, at micromolar concentrations of proR9, the subtilisin folding reaction becomes limited by the rate at which prolines in the unfolded state can isomerize to their native conformation. The simpliest mechanism which closely describes the data includes two denatured forms of subtilisin, which form the initial complex with proR9 at the same rate but which isomerize to the fully folded complex at much different rates. In this model, 77% of the subtilisin isomerizes to the native form slowly and the remaining 23% isomerizes more rapidly (1.5 s-1). The slow-folding population may be unfolded subtilisin with the trans form of proline 168, which must isomerize to the cis form during refolding. Third, in the absence of proline isomerization, the rate of subtilisin folding is rapid and at [proR9] </= 20 microM is limited by the rate at which the proR9 forms a collision complex with unfolded subtilisin. Without proline isomerization, the rate of the isomerization of the initial collision complex to the folded complex is >3 s-1. The implications of these results concerning why subtilisin folds slowly without the pro-domain are discussed.

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