Abstract

Sulfolobus solfataricus 5′-deoxy-5′-melthylthioadenosine phosphorylase II (SsMTAPII), is a hyperthermophilic hexameric protein with two intrasubunit disulfide bonds (C138–C205 and C200–C262) and a CXC motif (C259–C261). To get information on the role played by these covalent links in stability and folding, the conformational stability of SsMTAPII and C262S and C259S/C261S mutants was studied by thermal and guanidinium chloride (GdmCl)-induced unfolding and analyzed by fluorescence spectroscopy, circular dichroism, and SDS-PAGE. No thermal unfolding transition of SsMTAPII can be obtained under nonreducing conditions, while in the presence of the reducing agent Tris-(2-carboxyethyl) phosphine (TCEP), a Tm of 100°C can be measured demonstrating the involvement of disulfide bridges in enzyme thermostability. Different from the wild-type, C262S and C259S/C261S show complete thermal denaturation curves with sigmoidal transitions centered at 102°C and 99°C respectively. Under reducing conditions these values decrease by 4°C and 8°C respectively, highlighting the important role exerted by the CXC disulfide on enzyme thermostability. The contribution of disulfide bonds to the conformational stability of SsMTAPII was further assessed by GdmCl-induced unfolding experiments carried out under reducing and nonreducing conditions. Thermal unfolding was found to be reversible if the protein was heated in the presence of TCEP up to 90°C but irreversible above this temperature because of aggregation. In analogy, only chemical unfolding carried out in the presence of reducing agents resulted in a reversible process suggesting that disulfide bonds play a role in enzyme denaturation. Thermal and chemical unfolding of SsMTAPII occur with dissociation of the native hexameric state into denatured monomers, as indicated by SDS-PAGE.

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