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English Pages 455 [456] Year 1990
Modern Methods in Protein- and Nucleic Acid Research Review Articles
Modern Methods in Protein- and Nucleic Acid Research Review Articles
Editor Harald Tschesche
W G DE
Walter de Gruyter • Berlin • New York 1990
Editor Harald Tschesche, Dr. rer. nat. Professor für Biochemie Lehrstuhl für Biochemie Fakultät für Chemie Universität Bielefeld D-4800 Bielefeld Federal Republic of Germany
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Modern methods in protein- and nucleic acid research. Review articles Includes index. l.Proteins-Research-Methodology- Congresses. 2. Nucleic acidsResearch—Methodology—Congresses. I. Tschesche, Harald. QP551.M57 1990 574.19'245 90-14000 ISBN 3-11012275-8 (Berlin) ISBN 0-89925634-1
Deutsche Bibliothek Cataloging in Publication Data Modern methods in protein- and nucleic acid research : review articles / ed. Harald Tschesche. - Berlin ; New York : de Gruyter, 1990 ISBN 3-11012275-8 NE: Tschesche, Harald [Hrsg.]
© Printed on acid free paper which falls within the guidelines of the ANSI to ensure permanence and durability. © Copyright 1990 by Walter de Gruyter&Co., D-1000 Berlin 3 0 . All rights reserved, including those of translation into foreign languages. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Printing: Gerike GmbH, Berlin. - Binding: Dieter Mikolai, Berlin. - Printed in Germany.
Preface
This book complements the series of volumes on "Modern Methods in Protein Chemistry" published by de Gruyter in 1983, 1985 and 1988. It was the intention of this series to provide the growing family of researchers involved in the study of protein isolation, characterisation and modification with a compendium reviewing the latest developments in analytical and preparative methods. The aim was not to provide a complete listing of all efforts made in a particular field, but rather to give experts the opportunity to evaluate particular developments and to give a guide according to individual needs.
This is the first volume to include procedures required in nucleic acid chemistry and molecular biology. This is in accord with the intentions of the study group of the "Gesellschaft fur Biologische Chemie", which kindly supported the last conference on "Modern Methods in Protein and Nucleic Acid Analysis" held at the Centre of Interdisciplinary Research (ZIF) in Bielefeld in September, 1989. This volume contains some of the reviews presented during this conference, and additional reviewers were invited to present their methods in this book. Clearly there is a need for research laboratories involved in the study of proteins to have access to methods in protein and nucleic acid biochemistry as well as modern methods in molecular biology.
It is hoped, that this book will assist the reader in the evaluation and application of new methods in these fields and will help to avoid time-consuming and unnecessary errors.
Bielefeld, June 1990
Harald Tschesche
Contents Non-Radioactive Plaque and Colony Screening with Digoxigenin-ll-dUTP Tailed Oligonucleotides S. Schnierer, T. Gote, H. Tschesche
1
Oligonucleotide-Directed Mutation Construction W. Kramer, H.-J. Fritz
19
DNA Diagnostics - Applications and New Analytical Techniques B. S. Reckmann
37
Free Flow Electrophoresis for the Separation and Purification of Biopolymers H. Wagner, J. Heinrich
69
Separation of Proteins and Nucleic Acids using "Tentacle-Type" Ion Exchangers C. Jansen, W. Müller
99
Immobilized Metal Ion Affinity Chromatography of Recombinant Proteins E. Hochuli
117
Capillary Electrophoresis and Ion Spray Mass Spectrometry, New Powerful Methods for Separation and Characterization of Proteins and Nucleotides E. Bayer
133
Renaturation of Recombinant, Disulfide-Bonded Proteins from "Inclusion Bodies" R. Rudolph
149
"Activation Chromatography" - A New Approach for Dealing with Renaturation Problems in Protein Engineering Studies P. Flecker
173
Vili Progress in the Development of a C-Terminal Sequencing Method for Proteins and Peptides A. S. Inglis, F. Casagranda, B. Wittmann-Liebold
187
Determination of the Enantiomeric Composition of Amino Acids by Enantioselective Gas Chromatography W. A. König
213
Prediction of Peptide Epitopes in Proteins D. M. Dorati
231
Development of Specific Immunoassays for Thymosins W. Voelter, E. Livaniou, M. Mihelic
251
Bioaffinity Spin Labelling of Biomembrane Proteins R. I. Zhdanov
271
Cross-Linking between Nucleic Acids and Proteins A. Höckel, D. Prochnow, H. Fasold
297
Photoaffinity Labelling and its Combination with Biotin/Avidin Complexing in the Analysis of Peptide Hormone Receptors
305
D. Brandenburg, M. Fabry, F. Schumacher, U. Strack, F. Wedekind How Do You Get Large Proteins Crystals? Two Familiar Laboratory Methods Improved and Simplified G. Wiegand
343
Circular Dichroism as a Tool for Investigating Macromolecular Structure J. Reed
367
Modelling of Protein Structures on the Basis of Sequence Data
395
5. Suhai
IX
Analysis of Protein Structure in Solution by Two-Dimensional NMR Spectroscopy: 2D- 1 H NMR Investigation of Ribonuclease its Complexes with 2'- and 3'-Guanosine Monophosphates H. Rüterjans, E. Hoffmann, J. Schmidt, J. Simon Index
and
423
439
NON-RADIOACTIVE PLAQUE AND COLONY SCREENING WITH DIGOXIGENIN11-dUTP TAILED OLIGONUCLEOTIDES S. Schnierer, T. Gote and H. Tschesche
Introduction Several methods describe non-radioactive labelling of nucleic acids for use as hybridisation probes (1-5). The application of DNA hybridisation probes for detecting, localising and isolating specific nucleic acid sequences is well known. Some disadvantages surround the methods using radioactively labelled probes with
32
P: handling the radioactive material,
isotopic instability (short half-life) and long autoradiographic exposure times. Therefore, simple non-radioactive detection methods have become more popular. One of the most popular methods for labelling nucleic acids is the biotinylation of DNA by enzymatic incoproration of Biotin-ll-dUMP using standard nick translation (6) or 3'end labelling (7) protocols. Another popular method is chemical labelling of DNA via a photoactivatable biotin analogue using visible light irradiation. The labelled nucleic acids are recognised by an antibiotin antibody coupled with alkaline phosphatase and an enzyme-linked colour reaction. These methods gave satisfactory results of labelling DNA fragments
renaturation
step
f
( /
—
3),
(2)
SSG SSG
V (Eqn.
Y SSG SSG
formation
of
the
correct
disulfide bonds is catalyzed by GSH or other low molecular weight thiols (cysteine, cysteamine, 2-mercaptoethanol).
C The
GS-
Y
SSG SSG k
GSSG
v * GS" /y " yNGSSG
following
procedure,
X - — Y
V
/
as
SSG S-
modified
GS-
y
y GS-
from
; (26),
may
(3) be
utilized
for
disulfide bond formation via mixed disulfides: (1)
Incubate reduced, unfolded inclusion body protein at a protein concentration of 1-3 mg/ml in 0.05-0.1 M Tris-HCl, containing 0.1 M GSSG and-6 M GdmCl (or 8 M urea) at pH 9.3.
(2)
Incubate at room temperature for 5-18 h.
(3)
Quench derivatization by lowering the pH to pH 3 (e.g. by dropwise addition of 1 M HC1).
(4)
Separate mixed disulfide derivative from GSSG by dialysis (at 4°C against 0.1 M acetic acid or 0.01 M HC1) or by gel filtration (Sephadex G-25 with 0.1 M acetic acid or 0.01 M HC1 as eluant). Should the protein derivative precipitate, 6 M GdmCl (or 8 M urea) may be added to the dialysis/elution buffer.
163 (5)
Dilute mixed disulfide derivative into the freshly degassed renaturation buffer containing 0.05-0.1 Tris-HCl, 3-6 mM GSH (or other low molecular weight thiols) and 1 mM EDTA at pH 8-9. The protein concentration should be kept in the range of 5-100 /ig/ml.
(6)
Incubate at room temperature until renaturation is completed.
Renaturation
via
S-sulfonation, which may be used as an alternative
to
the formation of protein mixed disulfides, has been described elsewhere in considerable detail
(3,27,28).
Renaturation: Folding vs. Aggregation a) Dependence on protein concentration
«mm y
Figure
3:
Schematic illustration of the kinetic competition between proper folding (A: formation of a folding intermediate; B: formation of the native structure) and aggregation (C: aggregation of unfolded polypeptide chains; D: aggregation by incorrect domain interactions)
164 Upon
protein
disulfide
renaturation,
bond
formation)
with the formation
the has
pathway been
of inactive
of correct refolding
found
to
aggregates
be
in
kinetic
(29). As
(including competition
illustrated
in
Fig-
ure 3, aggregation may originate from non-specific (hydrophobic)
interac-
tions
as
at
the
level
incorrect domain
of the unfolded polypeptide
chain,
as well
interactions of partially structured folding
ates (30). In both cases, second (or higher) order aggregation compete with first order folding steps. Upon increase of the
intermedireactions concentra-
tion of unfolded polypeptide chains, the half-time of the folding tions
remains
constant,
while
the
rate
of
aggregation
from
reac-
increases.
Consequently, aggregation predominates during renaturation above a limiting concentration served
at
described
of denatured protein. The increase
increasing by
a
concentrations
simple
competitive
of
denatured
(folding
vs.
in aggregation
polypeptides aggregation)
may
obbe
reaction
mechani sm:
native
denatured
(4) aggregates
On the basis of the given kinetic model, the yield of reactivation can be computed as a function of the initial concentration of denatured
protein
(Eqn. 5).
y
= 100 • kj D0
y:
• K2
.in
(i + Dp • k 2
)
(5)
kj
yield of native protein (%)
DQ: molar concentration of denatured protein present at t = 0 kj: rate-determining folding step (1st order) k 2 : rate-determining aggregation step (2nd order)
165 Using this model, the decrease in the yield of reactivation of denatured lactic dehydrogenase, which has been previously determined as a function of Dp
(29), can be calculated with a normal
folding rate and diffusion
D 0 (J*) Figure 4: Effect of the concentration of denatured protein (DQ) on the extent of reactivation of porcine muscle lactic dehydrogenase (cf 29). Full lines are calculated according to eqn. 5 with M kj = 0.1 s"l and k2 = - s ~ l . Molar concentrations are based on a subunit molecular weight of 35 kDa. The
preponderance
of
aggregation
at
higher
protein
concentrations
has
been a major obstacle for the commercial application of in vitro folding processes.
Renaturation
at low protein concentrations would
necessitate
large reaction volumes, resulting in high production costs. This problem can be circumvented by a properly controlled renaturation procedure. Provided
that
below
a
the
actual
critical
level
concentration where
of denatured
aggregation
does
polypeptides not
is
kept
predominate,
high
yields of renaturation per volume of solution can be obtained (31). This may be achieved by slow and continuous, as well as by discontinuous addition of denatured protein into the renaturation solution (Figure 5).
166
e >>
> aa
the B o w m a n - B i r k - t y p e amino
subdomain
proteinase
acid replacements are
given.
in
the
175
by
denaturation
under
reducing
conditions
and
subsequent
renaturation. In Wettlaufer's system a mixture of reducing and oxidizing agents of defined ratio is used to facilitate the slow reshuffling of incorrect disulfide bridges [5]. The renaturation problem is even more limiting with artificial proteins.
Throughout protein engineering
attempts of de novo protein design
studies
[6] and
all
[7-8] deleterious refolding
properties are expected for protein variants, whose amino acid sequence has been changed by site-directed mutagenesis especially in those positions required for attaining a correct pathway of refolding. Here, a new approach to deal with such difficulties, 1.e. using a protein affinity ligand as a matrix with complementary structure, is described. 2.
Material and Methods
All materials and procedures, details of expression,
cyanogen
bromide cleavage, the refolding protocol for the parent Bowman Birk type proteinase inhibitor and the procedure for assaying residual trypsin and chymotrypsin activities have been published [9,10]. Bovine pancreatic trypsin was obtained from Boehringer Mannheim
and active
Sepharose [12].
5,83.10"
[11]. Trypsin
4B was prepared according to a published
The 9
site titrated as described
final
concentration
of trypsin
M. Bovine chymotrypsin,
in the
procedure assays
was
containing a minimum of 95%
active material, and the synthetic substrate were obtained from Sigma. The final chymotrypsin concentration in the assays was 4,16.10"8 M. The amounts of inbhibitor were calculated by the expressions
I = [E°] . V. Mr/R
and
R = Veq/Vtot.
176
[E°] is the final concentration of proteinase in mol/1, V the final
volume
of the
enzyme
assays
(6.10~41), Mr the
molecular mass of the inhibitor (8.109 ^.g/mol),
relative
the volume of
the aliquot of diluted stock solution at the equivalence point and Vtot the volume of diluted stock solution corresponding to the total amount of inhibitor. The determination of the equivalence points of the titrations has been described in detail [10]. Refolding/affinity
chromatography
for
mutant
proteinase
in-
hibitors Method A: 32 mg crude cyanogen bromide cleavage mixture were incubated in 240 (J.1 of reduction/denaturation buffer, containing 2 M Tris/Cl (pH 8), 0.2% EDTA, 6M guanidinium hydrochloride and 2 M 2-mercaptoethanol at 37°C for 18 h and added dropwise to 240 ml of renaturation buffer containing 80 mM Tris/Cl
(pH 8), 0.1
mM EDTA and 0.2 mM oxidized glutathione at 37°C under vigorous stirring. The refolding mixture was shaken for 60 min at 37°C, trypsin-Sepharose was added and shaking was continued at 32°C for 90 min. The matrix was transferred to a column and washed with 50 ml 0.1 M sodium borate (pH 7.6) containing 10 mM CaCl2, 50 ml 10 mM CaCl2 and 10 mM HC1 in the case of the P^-Pro and 5 mM HC1 in the case of the P2'-Pro and the P3'-Leu variant at 4°C. The
P/ -Pro
variant
was
eluted
with
100
mM
HC1,
the
other
variants with 50 mM HC1 at a flow rate of 0.2 ml/min. fractions were collected and 80 (J.1 aliquots were assayed
5 ml for
residual trypsin activities. The active fractions were pooled, diluted with the same volume of water and lyophilized to dryness.
Method B: The refolding mixtures were incubated for 6 h at 37°C and concentrated by repeated ultrafiltration to remove all low molecular weight compounds as described
[9], The samples were
dissolved in 15 ml water and applied to trypsin-Sepharose at 4°C
177
at a flow rate of 2 ml/min for 2 h. The respective variants were eluted as described in Method A. The combined flow-throughs of each experiment were concentrated and desalted by ultrafiltration, lyophilized and titrated with trypsin and chymotrypsin. The samples give single bands at 8 kDa of SDS gels and single active peaks on reversed-phase HPLC. The retention times are in accordance with the parent protein [9]. 3.
Results
In the case of the parent inhibitor, the isolated yield after the reduction/denaturation, the subsequent refolding step affinity chromatography (the yield of this step is greater than 95% in our hands),
is at a maximum at 30%
[9]. According to Fig.
1, a
stoichiometric ratio of 1:1 between the trypsin reactive and the chymotrypsin reactive subdomain is expected for this protein. Comparative titration (a simple test, which takes a half day of laboratory work in our hands) gave a stoichiometric ratio of 1:1 between both subdomains in the case of the parent inhibitor. This ratio remained constant within an experimental error range of +/10%, both in the crude preparation obtained by renaturation and ultrafiltration (Fig. 2A/1) on the one hand, and after subsequent affinity chromatography on trypsin-Sepharose
(Fig. 2B/1) on the
other. In contrast, the single amino acid replacements (constructed to test specific questions on the mechanism of proteinase inhibitors [13] and not occurring in other members of the Bowman Birk family of proteinase inhibitors [14]) P/Ser
—
>
Pro
P2' Asn
—
>
Pro
P3' Pro
—
>
Leu
and
178
1
Fig.2.
Results bars)
of
2
3
titration
4
experiments
and c h y m o t r v p s i n ( h a t c h e d
protein;
2:
the
P^'Pro-;
3:
with
trypsin(fi1led
b a r s ) . 1:
the
P2'Pro-;
the 4:
parent the
P3'Leu-variant. A:
yields(in
bitory
pg)
subdomain
of
trypsin-
and
chymotrvpsin-
before
the
contact
yields(in
pg)
after
with
inhi-
trypsin-
Sepharose. B:
respective
tography
on
the
matrix.
activation
chroma-
179
resulted in dramatic deviation from a stoichiometric ratio of 1:1. The results of the titration experiments of crude preparations are given in Fig. 2A/2-4. The relative amount of trypsin reactive material is reduced to a small fraction of the chymotrypsin reactive subdomain in the case of the P/Pro- and the P3'Leu-variant. activity.
All
The
P2'Pro-variant
attempts
to
is
achieve
devoid
better
of
any
trypsin
renaturation
by
a
systematic variation of temperature [15], the time of refolding, the dilution [9, 16], the ratio of B-mercaptoethanol and oxidized glutathion [16], the addition of structure stabilizing ions [17] and the presence of thioredoxin from Corynebacterium nephridii to facilitate reshuffling of incorrect disulfide bridges
[18]
remained unsuccessful. Nevertheless, a stoichiometric ratio of both subdomains was induced into these variants by the presence of trypsin-Sepharose either by the addition of trypsin-Sepharose to
the
refolding
mixture
(Method
A)
or
by
simple
affinity
chromatography after renaturation and ultrafiltration (Method B) . The absolute and relative increase of the amount of the trypsin reactive domain in the variants is seen on comparison of Fig. 2A/2-4 and 2B/2-4. This is in contrast to the situation in the parent protein displaying the same correct ratio of 1:1 before and after affinity chromatography. The accuracy of the titration experiments in the crude preparations was confirmed by addition of known
amounts
proteins
and
chymotrypsin
of correctly
redetermination inhibitory
refolded mutants to the of
material.
the
amounts
Clearly
the
of
crude
trypsin
and
stoichiometric
ratio of both subdomains achieved in the presence of trypsinSepharose is not the result of simple affinity chromatography. In this case, the minor amounts of trypsin reactive material will be retained on the column together with the same minor amount of chymotrypsin reactive material. However, no trace of chymotrypsin inhibitory activity was detectable in the combined flow-throughs
180
of each experiment after concentration and desalting by ultrafiltration . The
rate
of
refolding
of the
trypsin
reactive
subdomain
in
comparison to the chymotrypsin reactive subdomain is much slower in the P/Pro-variant in comparison to the parent protein. The variants
eluted
from the
affinity
columns
were
subjected
to
equilibration experiments in the refolding buffer for prolonged times
and
assayed
activities. decreased
for
trypsin
The relative amount
slowly
towards
the
and
chymotrypsin
inhibitory
of trypsin reactive
low
initial
level
material
(unpublished
observations in our laboratory). 4.
Discussion
The strong deviation
from a stoichiometric
ratio between the
subdomains points to significant structural irregularities in the variants.
These effects are localized to the same
subdomain,
which has been subjected to single amino acid replacements. A major difficulty of protein engineering studies is to detect and control refolding problems in a protein, which has been modified by site-directed mutagenesis. Therefore, a clear-cut dissection between structural and functional mutants [9, 10] is of critical importance for an unambiguous interpretation of the results. The Bowman Birk
inhibitor of serine proteinases proved
itself an
excellent model protein for this purpose. The incorrect amount of trypsin reactive material in the variants is shifted to correct values by the presence of trypsin-Sepharose as a matrix with complementary structure. It is conceivable, that such
an
affinity
matrix
should
be
effective
in guiding
the
refolding process of a protein variant towards the conformation of the native protein. Similar observations on the activation of
181
recombinant
subtilisin by the external
sequence were published
recently
addition
[19] and point
of
its Pro-
in the
same
direction. To the best of our knowledge, our paper [10] was the first report
on the use of an affinity matrix
for
mutant proteinase inhibitors. The term "Activation
refolding Chromatog-
raphy" is proposed for this new approach. The stability of the variants, both in the elution step (50-100 mM HC1)
and on equilibration
in the refolding buffer,
is in
accordance with a high energetic barrier between the folded state N and N*, the transition state of unfolding as postulated by Creighton [20] (Fig. 3). In the case of a structure stabilizing effect
(in a thermodynamic
sense)
exerted
by
the matrix,
a
subsequent equilibration back to the initial amounts of trypsin reactive material had to be exprected for the variants. The slow equilibration
is in accord with a kinetic effect of trypsin-
Sepharose on the refolding process and independent support for the cardbox protein folding model of Goldenberg & Creighton [21]. The transition state (N*) of the folding reaction as a distorted form of the folded state
(N) is apparently
stabilized by the
matrix resulting in a combined action of kinetic and thermodynamic effects on the protein folding process of the trypsin reactive subdomain. The failure to obtain a ratio of 1:1 in the titration experiments with free trypsin points to a specific stabilization of N* by distorted trypsin molecules being present on the solid matrix only. Fine distortion of immobilized proteins are known [22] and could be a crucial factor for the success of further
experiments
with
similar
systems.
In
any
case,
the
renaturation of the variants under non-reducing conditions by Method B suggests that the transition
from N to N* does not
concur with rearrangements of disulfide bonds (although this is no definite proof, as traces of active SH-groups might still be present after ultrafiltration or in incorrectly folded intermediates) .
182
0l?0P0CH2 AcJe HO HO OH U-O-j 0.0 o=c
0 0 0 ii ii ii HOfOfOlfOCH
I* 0 V 0 0 0 r~\ ii II II D-N V-OPOPOP OCH- Ad HO HO OH L'O
A(je
HO HO OH L^O-vJ
HO OH
8 o=c0
NH, 0 0 0 HOf>CH2!foi)oCH2 A c j e HO O OH L-'O-vj 10
0 0 0 II II II HOI^O^OPOCHj HO HO OH
o,o o=c
11
3
n-^nr
ft
0,0
0=C-t=
Figure 7. Spin-labeled ATP analogues. ATPase (36). In this study we were interested in the possibilities of using SL-ATP analocrues for the probing of rabbit sarcoplasmic reticulum
(SR) Ca-ATPase. Ca-pump is being studied for
a long time (37), and now the Ca-ATPase structure is comparatively well-known: the primary structure (38), the localization of Ca-binding and phosphorylation sites (39) as well as Ca-channel (40). Nevertheless the structure-functional studies of CaATPase by spectroscopic techniques including spin labeling are of considerable interest
(41-44).
283
Synthesis The synthesis of SL-ATP £ was reported by two research groups (27,28). We modified its synthetic procedure for the synthesis of SL-ATP (45) . This technique was later published by Repke et al (36) and in Russian monograph (31). According to this procedure (31,36,45) the 4-fold excess of equimolar mixture of 3-carboxy-2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolidinoxyl(46) and N,N-carbonyldiimidazole is added to ATP 30 min after its preparation. The nucleotides were precipitated by the excess of acetone after 4 5 min. The yellow precipitate was dried and applied on silica gel column. The elution of spin-labeled ATP was carried out with n-butanol/water/acetic acid (5:3:2) mixture. The fractions containing SL-ATP (EPR control) were extracted with ether after the addition of water. The water layers were evaporated, and the residue was lyophilized. The yield of SL-ATP 1_ is 31%. R,=0.35 (PEI-cellulose, 0.4 M KH-PO., pH 3.5) f ' 2 4 ' ^ ' '•"'max 257 nm (£ 14900); a =16.1 G(water); adenin:phosphate=0.35:1.0.
SL-ATP Substrate Activity SR vesicles were prepared from the white skeletal muscle of rabbit hind legs (47,48). According to electrophoresis and electron microscopy data the Ca-ATPase preparation is represented by membrane bubbles 95 per cent of protein being Ca-ATPase (the phospholipid content is equal to 0.7 mcmol P^mg (43,48). This Ca-ATPase preparation was characterized by the rate of P. -
1
-
1
1
production equaled to 13 mcmol mg min (48), but the velocity of the hydrolysis of SL-ATP 2 with Ca-ATPase was 2 mcmol mg min . However, SL-ATP analogue 6 containing pyrroline nitroxyl moiety was not hydrolized by the same Ca-ATPase preparation (44) . SL-ATP 1_ is also hydrolized by myosin Ca-ATPase from skeletal muscle. Myosin preparation was isolated by using method previously described (49,50). Fig.8 presents the Lineweaver-Burk
284
Figure 8. The Lineweaver-Burk plot for the hydrolysis of SL-ATP 2 with myosin Ca-ATPase (10). Ca ions were introduced into solution in the form of C a C ^ . The concentration of Ca -SL-ATP was variated from 2 0 mcM to 2 mcM. Conditions: 0.6 M KC1; 2 0 mcM myosin; 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5; 25°C. plot for the hydrolysis of SL-ATP with myosin. While the myosin Ca-ATPase activity during the ATP hydrolysis was 36 mcmol P.- 1 - 1 -11 g min , for the SL-ATP hydrolysis it was 114 mcmol P^g min + ^ (10). The Michaelis constant, K s equals to 30-20 mcM and values 60-40 mcM for ATP and SL-ATP —7, respectively. The V^ _1 _1 ' are equal to 0.25 meg sec and 0.3 meg sec , respectively. It follows from these data that myosin has much more affinity to SL-ATP as compared with ATP. The interaction of SL-ATP and manganese ions was also studied to testify the bioactivity of SL-ATP
(51).
EPR Measurements EPR spectra were recorded on Varian E-109 radiospectrometer with variable-temperature control system (-1°C) in the flat quartz cell (100 mcl). To prepare the samples for recording
285
EPR spectra, aliquots of concentrated solutions of SL-ATP, ATP, MgC 12, CaC]_2, NiCl 2 , K 3 Fe(CN) 6 and EGTA were added, as required, to 9 mg/ml SR Ca-ATPase to form a final volume of 100 mcl and 8 mg/ml ATPase. Modulation amplitude of 0.1 G, time constant of 0.1 sec and microwave power of 2 mW were used in all cases. The values of correlation time TT for SL-Ca-ATPase were calcuc latedfrom the equation (52) (Fig.9): < T c = 6 -65 where
H+1
" 1) 10" 1 0 sec
( V I + 1 / I_1
is the peak to peak line height of the EPR low-
field line, I + 1 and
are the amplitudes of low-field or
hiah-field components of SL-ATPase EPR spectrum. To determine the parameters of rotational diffusion for the SL-ATP-Ca-ATPase complex the Tf
values were calculated as an average quantity
from 15 measurements of various Ca-ATPase preparations using statistical analysis.
40 1
--19.0
1—
20 i
i
0 •
t°C
--21.0
- -23.0^ /f
1
/ r
««3
T 3.1
3.3
3.5
3.7
Figure 9. The Arrenius plot for the correlation time^ET, of SL-ATPase EPR spectrum (10,43). Conditions: 8 mg/ml (0.08 mM) SR Ca-ATPase, 0.17 mM MgCl 2 , 0.3 mM EGTA, 0.09 mM SL-ATP 7, pH 6.8, 25°C.
286
The I + .J -component of spin label isotropic EPR spectrum was used as SL-ATP concentration measure for reduction rate calculations The reaction rate of nitroxyl reduction with sodium ascorbate is circumscribed by the equation (K - reduction rate constant): V = -d I + 1 / dt = K /A/ /R/, where is the amplitude of low-field EPR component, t -time, /A/ - the ascorbate concentration, /R/ - spin label concentration. The plots were presented as the time dependence of In values. The K values can be estimated from the angle of the slope of these curves. After usual transformations the equation can be obtained ( At is a time interval ) : K = A In I+ 1 / A t /R/, which was used to calculate the reduction rate constants from the kinetic plots ( for the review see, i.e. (53). The kinetic data analysis was carried out with the use of the logarithmic extrapolation method and PC ISKRA (KURSK). So called "paramagnetic probe - spin label" technique (54) was used to determine the exchange relaxation rate constants for the interaction of SL-ATP with negatively (ferricyanide) or positively (Ni++) charged paramagnetic ions. These constants, K , were calculated from the equation: exch ^ A A
H +1^ = 6 . 5 10~8 K exch , C , '
where a a H + ^ is the difference between the AH + ^ values after and before the addition of paramagnetic ions, C - the concentration of paramagnetic ion, M.
Ca-ATPase probing The line shape and the correlation time values of Mg++-SL-ATP 1_
287
triplet spectrum with and without Ca-ATPase are very close. While the TT value without enzyme equals to 0.90-0.10* 10 ^ ^ + — 1 0 sec, the Cys and Thr-89 —> Ser destabilized conformation and reduced ATP-binding simultaneously. Although position 89 may be at the ATP-binding site, position 17 is probably not; they therefore suggested that affinity for ATP was reduced as a result of general changes in conformation affecting the binding site. The contribution of histidine-1 to the conformation and activity of glucagon was reviewed by Flanders et al. (34). They found an unexpected effect of substituting Phe, Ala or desHis at position 1 was a marked increase in helicity, probably due to increased trimerization, and pointed
378 out that conclusions based on changes of activity following a single amino acid substitution could follow from long range conformational effects as well as specific chemical differences in the side chain. Finally Epand and Liepnicks (35) carried out chemical modification of Arg-17 and Arg-18 in glucagon in order to increase solubility. They used CD to show that the modified form had the same conformation as native glucagon in dilute solution as well as the same ability to activate adenyl cyclase, so that it could serve as a more convenient experimental material. A vast amount of work has been done using CD to follow protein unfolding and refolding as a function of pH, temperature, denaturing agents or solvent changes (36-48). The ability CD offers to observe total secondary structure directly presents a distinct advantage in folding studies over methods based on the observation of local probes. Because of its extreme sensitivity in measuring slight differences in secondary structure content, one can follow subunit association/dissociation (36,48) as well as the folding and/or unfolding of individual protein chains. CD can also serve to establish the integrity of native conformation after modification, as seen earlier (35). Lin et al. (38) used both far UV and near UV CD to demonstrate that introducing an extrinsic cross-link between Lys-7 and Ly-41 in ribonuclease A, performed to aid in folding studies, had no significant effect on the secondary structure content or tyrosine CD of the native enzyme. Finally, and most simply, far UV CD can serve to establish the total secondary structure content of a native protein and so obtain some idea of its conformation when X-ray crystallography or NMR cannot be used. On their own, the data for percent a-helix, P-sheet and remainder may be of limited value, though useful for comparative studies (49-55) between similar proteins in different species or families of proteins functionally similar but sequentially distinct. But CD-derived secondary structure data may be combined with other physical measurements to construct a fuller structural model of the protein in question. Lane and Jardetzsky (56) combined CD with 'H-NMR to posit a preliminary structural analysis of the trp repressor. Siezen and Argos (57) made predictions of lens crystallin secondary structure derived from folding algorithms and checked the results with CD. Shin and McFarlane (58) put together results from secondary structure prediction methods, far UV CD and 'H-NMR to infer certain properties of the tertiary structure of myelin P2 protein. Peptide far UV CD -Interpretation. Although most peptides are small enough to allow full structural analysis from 'H-NMR, it is sometimes more convenient to use CD if
379 either the supply of peptide or access to a > 400 MHz NMR is limited. Woody (5) has published an extensive review of peptide CD, discussing the peptide chromophore CD, aromatic and disulfide contributions as relevant to the interpretation of peptide dichroism. As mentioned before, in estimating secondary structure content from far UV CD of peptides, one is better off using basis spectra of model peptides in standard conformations and fitting the curve linearly than using methods based on globular proteins either directly or indirecdy. Although the intensity of the bands for pure helical model peptides can vary with the side chain (Fig. 3), the variability principally affects the low wavelength positive maximum and is sufficiently small throughout so that predictions of helix content in heteropolypeptides are fairly accurate. The CD spectrum for (J-sheet is much more dependent on side chain (Fig. 4) in both amplitude and position of the bands, although it does appear to be a single spectral type. An attempt has been made by Fasman and his group (59) to divide the spectra observed into a 'normal' I-(3 type and a II-p type where the extrema are red-shifted, possibly due to the presence of (3 turns. Despite these drawbacks, basis spectra for (3 sheet from model peptides function sufficiently well to be in general use. 100
Figure 3: Effect of side chain on the intensity of the CD signal from a-helix. Poly-L-glutamic acid (in water, pH 4)
, poly-L-
lysine (in water, pH 11)
,
5
poly-[N -(2-hydroxyethyl)-L-glutamine (in 8:2 methanol:water)
,
poly-L-alanine (in TEE:TFA 98.5:1.5) Spectra from Adler et al. (9).
-50
180
200
220
240
260
380
Figure 4: Effect of side chain on the intensity of the CD signal from p-sheet. Poly-L-lysine
,
poly-(Lys-Leu-Lys-Leu) poly-L-serine
,
, poly-5-
carboxymethyl-L-cysteine Redrawn from spectra in Refs. 11, 5,61 and 9, respectively). The greatest problem in the use of model peptides to produce basis spectra for estimating secondary structure comes from selecting suitable models for random coil and for p-turns. In the first instance, part of the difficulty comes from confusion about the definition of "random coil". A majority of model peptides show a particular type of highly similar spectrum under conditions designed to disrupt formation of regular hydrogenbonded structure. The term "random coil" used for this is a little misleading in that, although meant to signify the absence of regularly repeating elements, it tends to imply that the peptide is freely rotating around all N-C a and C a -C' bonds. As demonstrated by Aebersold and Pysh (60), the calculated CD spectrum for an octapeptide freely rotating through -180«J>