Abstract
The major tuber storage protein of Colocasia esculenta, is a monocot mannose-binding, widely used dietary lectin, containing two polypeptides of 12.0 and 12.4 kDa. By both gel filtration and dynamic light scattering at pH 7.2, the lectin has a α2β2 form of apparent molecular mass of 48.2 kDa and a hydrodynamic radius of 6.1 ± .2 nm; however, at pH 3, it migrates as αβ and has a reduced hydrodynamic radius of 4.6 ± .3 nm. Our circular dichroism spectroscopy studies show that the lectin retains approximately 100% of its secondary structure between pH 2–8, going down to ~90% for extreme acidic/alkaline conditions. The fluorescence emission maxima of 346 to 350 nm for pH 4 to 10 show that the tryptophan residues are relatively exposed. The unfolding is a simple two-state process, N4 ↔ 4U, as seen in our denaturation scan profiles. These denaturation profiles, monitored separately by fluorescence, far-UV CD, and near-UV CD, are completely super imposable. Analyses of these profiles provide an estimate of several thermodynamic parameters at each guanidinium chloride concentration, including the melting temperature Tg, which is 346.9 K in 0 M, but lowers to 321.8 K in 3.6 M. Dimeric and tetrameric interfaces observed in the crystal structure for the same protein are used to rationalize solution data in some detail.
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