In an attempt to characterize the early folding events in bovine beta- lactoglobulin (BLG), a set of peptides, covering the flexible N-terminal region and the stable C-terminus beta-core, was synthesized and analyzed by circular dichroism and by nuclear magnetic resonance in water, trifluoroethanol (TFE), and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) below and above the critical micellar concentration. The role of local and long-range hydrophobic interactions in guiding the folding has been investigated. For the peptide fragment covering the more flexible N-terminal region of BLG (beta-strands A, B), where both theoretical predictions and kinetic refolding experiments suggested the formation of non-native alpha-helix, no native long-range contacts were identified, and a helical secondary structure was stabilized only in the presence of 25 mM SDS. At variance, in 50% (v/v) TFE, native, long-range hydrophobic interactions were observed in the peptide covering the core region comprising G and H beta- strands. The side chains involved in these interactions form a nativelike hydrophobic cluster, thus suggesting that the GH region may act as the folding initiation site for BLG. This result is reinforced by the identification, in the urea denaturated BLG, of residual structure located at the level of the GH interface, as evidenced by NMR analysis. These results, in excellent agreement with kinetic, thermodynamic, and cold denaturation folding data, once more underline the utmost importance of the GH region for the stability and folding of BLG. Severe aggregation effects prevented the structural analysis of the peptide covering the EFGH region, indicating that this larger segment does not represent an independent folding domain and that the terminal alpha-helix is necessary for stabilizing the BLG folding core.

Identification of initiation sites for bovine b-lactoglobulin folding using CD, NMR and dynamic simulations of peptide fragments

Ragona L;Zetta L;
2002

Abstract

In an attempt to characterize the early folding events in bovine beta- lactoglobulin (BLG), a set of peptides, covering the flexible N-terminal region and the stable C-terminus beta-core, was synthesized and analyzed by circular dichroism and by nuclear magnetic resonance in water, trifluoroethanol (TFE), and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) below and above the critical micellar concentration. The role of local and long-range hydrophobic interactions in guiding the folding has been investigated. For the peptide fragment covering the more flexible N-terminal region of BLG (beta-strands A, B), where both theoretical predictions and kinetic refolding experiments suggested the formation of non-native alpha-helix, no native long-range contacts were identified, and a helical secondary structure was stabilized only in the presence of 25 mM SDS. At variance, in 50% (v/v) TFE, native, long-range hydrophobic interactions were observed in the peptide covering the core region comprising G and H beta- strands. The side chains involved in these interactions form a nativelike hydrophobic cluster, thus suggesting that the GH region may act as the folding initiation site for BLG. This result is reinforced by the identification, in the urea denaturated BLG, of residual structure located at the level of the GH interface, as evidenced by NMR analysis. These results, in excellent agreement with kinetic, thermodynamic, and cold denaturation folding data, once more underline the utmost importance of the GH region for the stability and folding of BLG. Severe aggregation effects prevented the structural analysis of the peptide covering the EFGH region, indicating that this larger segment does not represent an independent folding domain and that the terminal alpha-helix is necessary for stabilizing the BLG folding core.
2002
Istituto per lo Studio delle Macromolecole - ISMAC - Sede Milano
NMR
beta-lactoglobulin
folding
lipocalin
peptide
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/23084
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact