Abstract

Many membrane proteins appear to be present and functional in higher-order oligomeric states. While few studies have analyzed the thermodynamic stability of α-helical transmembrane (TM) proteins under equilibrium conditions in the past, oligomerization of larger polytopic monomers has essentially not yet been studied. However, it is vital to study the folding of oligomeric membrane proteins to improve our understanding of the general mechanisms and pathways of TM protein folding. To investigate the folding and stability of the aquaglyceroporin GlpF from Escherichia coli, unfolding of the protein in mixed micelles was monitored by steady-state fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy as well as by seminative sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analyses. On the basis of our results, it appears most likely that GlpF unfolds in a two-step process, involving the equilibrium of tetrameric, dimeric, and monomeric GlpF species. A kinetic analysis also indicates an intermediate along the kinetic GlpF unfolding pathway, and thus, two phases are involved in GlpF unfolding. While three-state unfolding pathways and a dimeric folding intermediate are not uncommon for water-soluble proteins, a stable (un)folding intermediate with a decreased oligomeric structure has not been detected or reported for any α-helical membrane protein.

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