EQUILIBRIUM DISSOCIATION AND UNFOLDING OF NUCLEOSIDE DIPHOSPHATE KINASE FROM DICTYOSTELIUM-DISCOIDEUM - ROLE OF PROLINE 100 IN THE STABILITY OF THE HEXAMERIC ENZYME

被引:0
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作者
LASCU, I
DEVILLEBONNE, D
GLASER, P
VERON, M
机构
[1] INST PASTEUR,UNITE REGULAT EXPRESS GENET,CNRS,URA 1129,F-75724 PARIS 15,FRANCE
[2] CEA,DIEP,DIRECT SCI VIVANT,F-91190 GIF SUR YVETTE,FRANCE
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中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The Killer-of-prune (K-pn) mutation in Drosophila corresponds to a Pro-Ser substitution in nucleoside diphosphate kinase (Lascu, I. Chaffotte, A., Limbourg-Bouchon, B., and Veron, M. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 12775-12781). We investigated the role of the equivalent proline (Pro100) in the formation and stability of the Dictyostelium nucleoside diphosphate kinase hexamers. Mutations to serine or glycine had only little effect on the properties of the native enzyme. However, the mutant drastically affected the subunit interaction in the hexamer and the ability of the isolated subunits to associate in vitro. While the wild-type hexamer inactivated and unfolded concomitantly at 5-6 M urea, the mutant proteins dissociated to monomers at 0.5-2 M urea and unfolded at 2.5-4 M urea. At intermediate urea concentrations, the unique species present in solution was a folded, partially active monomer as shown by size-exclusion chromatography, UV, fluorescence, and CD spectroscopy. Proline 100 is located in a loop involved in subunits contact. Altered conformation of the loop in P100S and P100S mutants demonstrates its crucial role in subunit assembly. We propose to explain the conditional dominance of the K-pn mutation by the presence of a monomeric form of the enzyme that would have deleterious effects in vivo.
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页码:20268 / 20275
页数:8
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