Abstract

Single-chain monellin (SCM), which is an engineered 94-residue polypeptide, has been characterized as being as sweet as native two-chain monellin. Data from gel-filtration high performance liquid chromatography and NMR has proven that SCM exists as a monomer in aqueous solution. In order to determine the structural origin of the taste of sweetness, we engineered several mutant SCM proteins by mutating Glu(2), Asp(7), and Arg(39) residues, which are responsible for sweetness. In this study, we present the solution structure, backbone dynamics, and stability of mutant SCM proteins using circular dichroism, fluorescence, and NMR spectroscopy. Based on the NMR data, a stable alpha-helix and five-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet were identified for double mutant SCM. Strands beta1 and beta2 are connected by a small bulge, and the disruption of the first beta-strand were observed with SCM(DR) comprising residues of Ile(38)-Cys(41). The dynamical and folding characteristics from circular dichroism, fluorescence, and backbone dynamics studies revealed that both wild type and mutant proteins showed distinct dynamical as well as stability differences, suggesting the important role of mutated residues in the sweet taste of SCM. Our results will provide an insight into the structural origin of sweet taste as well as the mutational effect in the stability of the engineered sweet protein SCM.

Highlights

  • Single-chain monellin (SCM), which is an engineered 94-residue polypeptide, has been characterized as being as sweet as native two-chain monellin

  • In order to determine the structural origin of the taste of sweetness, we engineered several mutant SCM proteins by mutating Glu2, Asp7, and Arg39 residues, which are responsible for sweetness

  • We present the solution structure, backbone dynamics, and stability of mutant SCM proteins using circular dichroism, fluorescence, and NMR spectroscopy

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Summary

STRUCTURAL ORIGIN OF SWEETNESS*

We present the solution structure, backbone dynamics, and stability of mutant SCM proteins using circular dichroism, fluorescence, and NMR spectroscopy. The dynamical and folding characteristics from circular dichroism, fluorescence, and backbone dynamics studies revealed that both wild type and mutant proteins showed distinct dynamical as well as stability differences, suggesting the important role of mutated residues in the sweet taste of SCM. The crystal structure of native two-chain monellin has been determined as showing a ␤-sheet comprising five antiparallel strands and a single 17-residue long ␣-helix. The conformational study for both native and mutated non-sweet analog two-chain monellin have been studied by two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; these studies have shown that the three-dimensional structures of native monellin and two thiol proteinase inhibitors, cystatin and stefin B, are very similar [13]. Properties, and protein stability of single-chain monellins by heteronuclear NMR, circular dichroism, and fluorescence spectroscopy

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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