Article
pH Dependent Thermodynamic and Amide Exchange Studies of the C-Terminal Domain of the Ribosomal Protein L9: Implications for Unfolded State Structure†
This work was supported by NIH Grant GM70941 to D.P.R.
Department of Chemistry.
Current address: Department of Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin at Madison, Madison, WI 53706.
Corresponding author. Tel: 631-632-9547. Fax: 631-632-7960. E-mail: draleigh@notes.cc.sunysb.edu.
Graduate Program in Biochemistry and Structural Biology.
Abstract

It is now recognized that unfolded states of globular proteins are not random coils but instead can contain significant amounts of residual structure. Here, we combine amide H/D exchange studies and thermodynamic measurements to probe pH dependent structure in the unfolded state of the small, mixed α-β protein CTL9. The m value measured by urea denaturation is strongly dependent upon pD, increasing by 40% from pD 7.5 to 4.85. Likewise, the change in heat capacity upon unfolding, ΔCp°, increases significantly from pD 7.5 to 5.5. These studies argue that the unfolded state contains interactions, presumably hydrophobic in nature, that lead to a more compact state at high pH. The expansion at lower pH correlates with the estimated unfolded state pKa values of the three histidines in CTL9 with additional contributions from acid side chains at the lower pH. Amide H/D exchange studies were conducted at pD 5.0, 6.0, and 7.0. At pD 5.0, the exchange rates could be measured for 44 residues, 29 of which exchanged by global unfolding. No evidence was found for any super protected sites, that is, sites that exchange at rates slower than those expected for global exchange. The estimated precision for the experiments limits detection to residues that are protected 2.3-fold above the intrinsic exchange rate. Thirty-seven residues could be followed at pD 6 and 27 residues at pD 7. Again no evidence for a significant super protected structure was observed. The properties of CTL911 are compared to other structured denatured states.
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History
- Published In Issue July 18, 2006
- Received December 12, 2005
Revised Manuscript Received February 19, 2006
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