posted on 2012-04-18, 00:00authored byRobert Silvers, Friederike Sziegat, Hideki Tachibana, Shin-ichi Segawa, Sara Whittaker, Ulrich
L. Günther, Frank Gabel, Jie-rong Huang, Martin Blackledge, Julia Wirmer-Bartoschek, Harald Schwalbe
During oxidative folding, the formation of disulfide
bonds has
profound effects on guiding the protein folding pathway. Until now,
comparatively little is known about the changes in the conformational
dynamics in folding intermediates of proteins that contain only a
subset of their native disulfide bonds. In this comprehensive study,
we probe the conformational landscape of non-native states of lysozyme
containing a single native disulfide bond utilizing nuclear magnetic
resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS),
circular dichroism (CD) data, and modeling approaches. The impact
on conformational dynamics varies widely depending on the loop size
of the single disulfide variants and deviates significantly from random
coil predictions for both NMR and SAXS data. From these experiments,
we conclude that the introduction of single disulfides spanning a
large portion of the polypeptide chain shifts the structure and dynamics
of hydrophobic core residues of the protein so that these regions
exhibit levels of order comparable to the native state on the nanosecond
time scale.