Abstract

In Hydrogenobacter thermophilus cytochrome c(552), an electrostatic interaction between Lys8 and Glu68 in the N- and C-terminal helices, respectively, stabilizes its protein structure [Travaglini-Allocatelli, C., Gianni, S., Dubey, V. K., Borgia, A., Di Matteo, A., Bonivento, D., Cutruzzola, F., Bren, K. L., and Brunori, M. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 25729-25734], this electrostatic interaction being a highly conserved structural feature of the cytochrome c family. In the present study, the functional consequences of removal of the interaction through replacement of Lys8 by Ala have been investigated in order to elucidate the molecular mechanisms responsible for functional control of the protein. The mutation resulted in a decrease in protein stability, as reflected in lowering of the denaturation temperature by approximately 2-9 degrees C, and a negative shift by approximately 8 mV of the redox potential (E(m)) of the protein. The decrease in the protein stability was attributed to the enthalpic loss due to the removal of the intramolecular interaction. The negative shift of the E(m) value was shown to be due to the effect of the mutation on the entropic contribution to the E(m) value. The small, but subtle, effects of removal of the conserved electrostatic interaction, occurring at approximately 1.4 nm away from heme iron, on the thermodynamic properties of the protein demonstrated not only that the interaction is important for maintaining the functional properties of the protein but also that amino acid residues relatively remote from the heme active site play sizable roles in functional control of the protein.

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