2 resultados para Épaves

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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Water is the natural medium for protein folding, which is also used in all in vitro studies. In the present work, we posed, and answered affirmatively, a question of whether it is possible to fold correctly a typical protein in a nonaqueous solvent. To this end, unfolded and reduced hen egg-white lysozyme was refolded and reoxidized in glycerol containing varying amounts of water. The unfolded/reduced enzyme was found to regain spontaneously substantial catalytic activity even in the nearly anhydrous solvent; for example, the refolding yield in 99% glycerol was still some one-third of that in pure water, and one-half of that was regained even in 99.8% glycerol. The less than full recovery of the enzymatic activity in glycerol is, as in water, because of competing protein aggregation during the refolding. Lysozyme reoxidation in glycerol was successfully mediated by two dissimilar oxidizing systems, and the refolding yield was markedly affected by the pH of the last aqueous solution before the transfer into glycerol. No recovery of the lysozyme activity was observed when the refolding/reoxidation reaction was carried out in the denaturing solvent dimethyl sulfoxide. This study paves the way for a systematic investigation of the solvent effect on protein folding and demonstrates that water is not a unique milieu for this process.

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We report a general mass spectrometric approach for the rapid identification and characterization of proteins isolated by preparative two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This method possesses the inherent power to detect and structurally characterize covalent modifications. Absolute sensitivities of matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization and high-energy collision-induced dissociation tandem mass spectrometry are exploited to determine the mass and sequence of subpicomole sample quantities of tryptic peptides. These data permit mass matching and sequence homology searching of computerized peptide mass and protein sequence data bases for known proteins and design of oligonucleotide probes for cloning unknown proteins. We have identified 11 proteins in lysates of human A375 melanoma cells, including: alpha-enolase, cytokeratin, stathmin, protein disulfide isomerase, tropomyosin, Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase, nucleoside diphosphate kinase A, galaptin, and triosephosphate isomerase. We have characterized several posttranslational modifications and chemical modifications that may result from electrophoresis or subsequent sample processing steps. Detection of comigrating and covalently modified proteins illustrates the necessity of peptide sequencing and the advantages of tandem mass spectrometry to reliably and unambiguously establish the identity of each protein. This technology paves the way for studies of cell-type dependent gene expression and studies of large suites of cellular proteins with unprecedented speed and rigor to provide information complementary to the ongoing Human Genome Project.