Covalent tethering of the dimer interface annuls aggregation in thymidylate synthase


Autoria(s): Agarwalla, S; Gokhale, RS; Santi, DV; Balaram, P
Data(s)

01/02/1996

Resumo

Thymidylate synthase (TS), a dimeric enzyme, forms large soluble aggregates at concentrations of urea (3.3-5 M), well below that required for complete denaturation, as established by fluorescence and size-exclusion chromatography. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, an engineered mutant of TS (T155C/E188C/C244T), TSMox, in which two subunits are crosslinked by disulfide bridges between residues 155-188' and 188-155', does not show this behavior. Aggregation behavior is restored upon disulfide bond reduction in the mutant protein, indicating the involvement of interface segments in forming soluble associated species. Intermolecular disulfide crosslinking has been used as a probe to investigate the formation of larger non-native aggregates. The studies argue for the formation of large multimeric species via a sticky patch of polypeptide from the dimer interface region that becomes exposed on partial unfolding. Covalent reinforcement of relatively fragile protein-protein interfaces may be a useful strategy in minimizing aggregation of non-native structures in multimeric proteins.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/27346/1/61.pdf

Agarwalla, S and Gokhale, RS and Santi, DV and Balaram, P (1996) Covalent tethering of the dimer interface annuls aggregation in thymidylate synthase. In: Protein Science, 5 (2). pp. 270-277.

Publicador

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press

Relação

http://www.proteinscience.org/details/journalArticle/116486/Covalent_tethering_of_the_dimer_interface_annuls_aggregation_in_thymidylate_synt.html

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/27346/

Palavras-Chave #Molecular Biophysics Unit
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed