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1.
J Phys Chem B ; 123(32): 6933-6945, 2019 08 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31335143

ABSTRACT

Alkyl imidazolium chloride ionic liquids (ILs) have been used for numerous biochemical applications. Their hydrophobicity can be tuned by changing the alkyl chain length, and longer-chain ILs can form micelles in aqueous solution. We have investigated the effects of imidazolium chloride ILs on the structure and stability of azurin, which is a very stable Cu2+ redox protein with both α-helix and ß-sheet domains. Temperature-dependent infrared (IR) and vibrational circular dichroism spectroscopy can provide secondary-structure-specific information about how the protein is affected, and temperature-jump transient IR measurements can quantify the IL-influenced unfolding dynamics. Using these techniques, we can quantify how azurin is destabilized by 1.0 M ILs in aqueous solution. The shorter, less hydrophobic ILs, 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride and 1-hexyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride likely interact with the α-helix domain and decrease protein melting temperature from 82 °C without IL to 55 °C and disturb the overall tertiary structure, resulting in a looser, more open shape. Thermodynamic analysis indicates that protein destabilization is due to increased unfolding entropy. 1-Octyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride [OMIM]Cl, which forms micelles in solution that may partially solvate the protein, has a more significant destabilizing effect, resulting in a melting temperature of 35 °C, larger unfolding entropy, and relaxation kinetics several orders of magnitude faster than with unperturbed azurin. The temperature-independence of the relaxation time constant suggests that in the presence of [OMIM]Cl, the protein folding potential energy surface has become very smooth.


Subject(s)
Azurin/chemistry , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Imidazoles/pharmacology , Ionic Liquids/pharmacology , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/metabolism , Water/chemistry , Azurin/drug effects , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation , Kinetics , Micelles , Thermodynamics
2.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1794(3): 569-76, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19150514

ABSTRACT

Poly(ethylene glycol) or PEG is a hydrophilic polymer that covalently linked to therapeutical proteins may significantly increase their pharmacological properties. Despite the extensive production of PEG-conjugated proteins the effects of the polymer on the protein structure and dynamics is poorly understood, making the production of active biomaterials a largely unpredictable process. The present investigation examines the effects of 5 k and 20 k PEG on the internal flexibility of Ribonuclease T1, the mutant C112S of azurin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, alcohol dehydrogenase and alkaline phosphatase, native and Zn-depleted. These systems encompass structural domains that range from rather superficial, flexible sites to deeply buried, rigid cores. The approach is based on three sensitive parameters related to the phosphorescence emission of internal Trp residues, namely, the intrinsic room-temperature phosphorescence lifetime (tau(0)) that reports on the local flexibility of the protein matrix around the chromophore and the bimolecular rate constant (k(q)) for the quenching of phosphorescence by O(2) and by acrylamide in solution, which are related to the diffusion of these solutes through the protein fold. The results obtained by these three independent, intrinsic probes of protein structure-dynamics concur that mono-PEGylation does not detectably perturb the conformation and dynamics of the protein native fold, over a wide temperature range. The implication is that protein motions are essentially not coupled to the polymer and that adverse effects of chemical modification on biological function are presumably owed to steric hindrance by PEG units blocking the access to sites critical for molecular recognition.


Subject(s)
Polyethylene Glycols/pharmacology , Proteins/drug effects , Acrylamide/chemistry , Azurin/chemistry , Azurin/drug effects , Enzyme Stability/drug effects , Luminescent Measurements , Oxygen/chemistry , Protein Conformation/drug effects , Protein Folding/drug effects , Proteins/chemistry , Ribonuclease T1/chemistry , Ribonuclease T1/drug effects , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Tryptophan/chemistry , Tryptophan/drug effects
3.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1342(1): 19-27, 1997 Sep 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9366266

ABSTRACT

The unfolding by guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) and the refolding on dilution of zinc and apoazurin have been monitored by far-UV circular dichroism (CD). With the native protein, the unfolding was followed by CD and optical absorption in the visible spectral region. With the zinc protein, the reversible unfolding has also been followed by tryptophan fluorescence and NMR. The zinc and Cu2+ metal ions remain associated with the protein in the unfolded state. When the unfolding of the native protein is followed by CD, the initial, reversible transition due to unfolding is followed by a slow change associated with the reduction of Cu2+ by the thiol group of the ligand Cys112. The unfolding of apoazurin displays two CD transitions, which evidence suggests represent different folding domains, the least stable one including the metal-binding site and the other one the rest of the beta-sheet structure. Both occur at a lower GuHCl concentration than the unfolding of the native protein. The CD titrations also demonstrate that zinc azurin has a lower stability than the copper protein. Unfolding of zinc azurin followed by tryptophan fluorescence occurs at a much lower GuHCl concentration than the CD changes, and NMR spectra show that there is no loss of secondary and tertiary structure at this concentration, whereas the CD-detected loss of secondary structure correlates with the NMR changes. Thus, the fluorescence change is ascribed to a small local perturbation of the structure around the single tryptophan residue. The differences in stability of the three forms of azurin are discussed in terms of the rack mechanism. A bound metal ion stabilizes the native fold, and this stabilization is larger for Cu(II) than for Zn(II), reflecting the higher affinity of the protein for Cu(II).


Subject(s)
Apoproteins/chemistry , Azurin/chemistry , Protein Folding , Protein Structure, Secondary , Zinc/pharmacology , Apoproteins/metabolism , Azurin/drug effects , Azurin/metabolism , Circular Dichroism , Copper/pharmacology , Guanidine/pharmacology , Kinetics , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Protein Denaturation , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/drug effects , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Tryptophan
4.
J Bioenerg Biomembr ; 27(3): 295-302, 1995 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8847343

ABSTRACT

Photochemical techniques have been used to measure the kinetics of intramolecular electron transfer in Ru(bpy)2(im)(His)2(+)-modified (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine; im = imidazole) cytochrome c and azurin. A driving-force study with the His33 derivatives of cytochrome c indicates that the reorganization energy (lambda) for Fe2+-->Ru3+ ET reactions is 0.8 eV. Reductions of the ferriheme by either an excited complex, *Ru2+, or a reduced complex, Ru+, are anomalously fast and may involve formation of an electronically excited ferroheme. The distance dependence of Fe2+-->Ru3+ and Cu+-->Ru3+ electron transfer in 12 different Ru-modified cytochromes and azurins has been analyzed using a tunneling-pathway model. The ET rates in 10 of the 12 systems exhibit an exponential dependence on metal-metal separation (decay constant of 1.06 A-1) that is consistent with prediction of the pathway model.


Subject(s)
Azurin/chemistry , Azurin/metabolism , Cytochrome c Group/chemistry , Cytochrome c Group/metabolism , Electron Transport , Protein Structure, Secondary , Ruthenium/pharmacology , Azurin/drug effects , Cytochrome c Group/drug effects , Histidine , Kinetics , Models, Theoretical , Photochemistry/methods , Thermodynamics
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