From the Department of Human Biological Chemistry and Genetics, Sealy Center for Structural Biology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas 77555-1052
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ABSTRACT |
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A growing number of biologically important proteins have been identified as fully unfolded or partially disordered. Thus, an intriguing question is whether such proteins can be forced to fold by adding solutes found in the cells of some organisms. Nature has not ignored the powerful effect that the solution can have on protein stability and has developed the strategy of using specific solutes (called organic osmolytes) to maintain the structure and function cellular proteins in organisms exposed to denaturing environmental stresses (Yancey, P. H., Clark, M. E., Hand, S. C., Bowlus, R. D., and Somero, G. N. (1982) Science 217, 1214-1222). Here, we illustrate the extraordinary capability of one such osmolyte, trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), to force two thermodynamically unfolded proteins to fold to native-like species having significant functional activity. In one of these examples, TMAO is shown to increase the population of native state relative to the denatured ensemble by nearly five orders of magnitude. The ability of TMAO to force thermodynamically unstable proteins to fold presents an opportunity for structure determination and functional studies of an important emerging class of proteins that have little or no structure without the presence of TMAO.
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INTRODUCTION |
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A growing number of biologically important proteins have been
identified as fully or partially disordered under physiological conditions (e.g. different classes of DNA-binding proteins
(1), transactivation domains of transcription factors (2-6), non-A component of Alzheimer's disease amyloid plaque precursor implicated in Alzheimer's disease (7), and others (8, 9). The issue of shifting a
protein or domain from an unfolded to a folded ensemble is a topic of
interest not only for these proteins, but also for a host of marginally
stable proteins. A question of interest is whether such proteins can be
induced to adopt unique and functionally important ordered structures
by addition of solutes found in the cells of some organisms.
According to Anfinsen, "The native conformation of protein is determined by the totality of interatomic interactions and by the amino acid sequence, in a given environment " (10). Although the statement by Anfinsen acknowledges the importance of both amino acid sequence and the physiological milieu in defining the native (Gibbs energy minimum) conformation of proteins, the overwhelming emphasis in the protein folding field has been on the interatomic interaction aspect of the process (11). Nature, however, has not ignored the powerful effect that the solution can have on protein stability and has developed the strategy of using specific solutes (called organic osmolytes) to maintain the structure of proteins in cells exposed to denaturing environmental stresses (12). Thus, through the power of natural selection, solutes were evolved that have exceptional ability to promote the native states of proteins in the presence of denaturing stresses. The implication is that in the absence of denaturing stresses, osmolytes continue to exert a force to fold proteins that are highly unstable in an aqueous environment.
Two examples of proteins that exist in the unfolded state in buffer are considered. These two unfolded proteins are forced to fold cooperatively into native-like species by the presence of trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO),1 a solute found in the cells of elasmobranchs that stabilizes the intracellular proteins against the presence of urea (12, 13). The two proteins are: 1) reduced and carboxyamidated ribonuclease T1 (RCAM-T1), a chemical modification that releases conformational constraints and greatly stabilizes the unfolded state relative to the native state, and 2) staphylococcal nuclease mutant protein (T62P), in which replacement of a threonine with proline in a helix greatly destabilizes the native state relative to the unfolded ensemble. We show that TMAO folds these two highly unfolded proteins to species that acquire functional activity and secondary and tertiary structures much like that of wild type or unmodified protein.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Reduction and carboxyamidation of RNase T1 was performed using
iodoacetamide, in the manner described by Mücke and Schmid (14).
Ribonuclease T1 with all four cysteines carboxyamidated migrated as a
single band in native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and as a
single peak when chromatographed on a Phenomenex Biosep SEC-S3000
gel-filtration column. The assay for free thiols with Ellman's reagent
was negative. RNase T1 and RCAM-T1 concentrations were determined
spectrophotometrically at 278 nm (1 mg/ml = 1.9 absorbance units).
Activity measurements of RNase T1 and RCAM-T1 are described in Ref. 15.
Proteins equilibrated at different concentrations of TMAO (in 30 mM MOPS, 0.1 M NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 0.5 mg/ml bovine serum albumin, pH 7.0, 25 °C) for 4 h was diluted 20-fold into the same TMAO buffer containing 75 µM GpC at
25 °C. The resulting increase in absorbance at 257 nm caused by
cleavage of GpC was recorded and the initial velocity presented in
terms of A257/min/mg of protein.
TMAO-induced folding of RCAM-T1 (10 µg/ml) was monitored using a Spex FluoroMax spectrofluorimeter and involved intrinsic fluorescence (278 or 295 nm excitation and 319 nm emission) measurements in solution (30 mM MOPS, 0.1 M NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, pH 7.0) as a function of TMAO concentration. All measurements were made using 1-cm square cuvettes thermostatted at 25 °C, and all data were corrected for the contribution of the respective solute concentrations. CD spectra were recorded at 40 nm/min in 0.1-cm cuvettes (0.3 mg/ml protein) for the peptide region (<250 nm), and in 1-cm cuvettes (1.5 mg/ml protein concentration) in the aromatic region (310-260 nm) in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.0, buffer at 25 °C. The bandwidth was 1.5 nm, and each spectrum shown is the result of eight spectra accumulated and averaged. All spectra were corrected for the contributions of the respective buffers. Size exclusion chromatography was carried out using a Phenomenex Biosep SEC-S3000 HPLC gel filtration column 300 × 7.80 mm, equilibrated in buffer (30 mM MOPS, 0.2 M NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, pH 7.0) in the absence or presence of the indicated concentration of TMAO at 25 °C. Prior to their injection, RNase T1 and RCAM-T1 samples (10 µg/ml) were incubated using the buffer and [TMAO] conditions for chromatography equilibration. In all experiments the samples were incubated at 25 °C at least 4 h before measurement.
Purification and specific activity measurements of wild type SNase and
T62P mutant protein were performed as described in Ref. 16. Protein
solutions equilibrated at different concentrations of TMAO (in 25 mM Tris-HCl, 0.1 M NaCl, 10 mM
CaCl2, pH 8.8) for 30 min were then diluted 60-fold into
assay solutions (thermostatted at 25 °C) containing the same buffer
and solute concentrations as the sample. The resulting increase in
absorbance at 260 nm caused by the cleavage of DNA was recorded and the
initial slope presented in terms of
A260/min/mg was used as a measure of specific activity. Wild type SNase and T62P mutant concentrations were determined by UV absorption at 280 nm (1 mg/ml = 0.93 absorbance units), purity was confirmed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and molecular weight was confirmed by electrospray mass spectrometry. The fluorescence spectra of SNase samples were collected upon excitation at 278 nm (in 25 mM Tris-HCl, 0.1 M
NaCl, 10 mM CaCl2 containing 50 µg/ml protein
(1-cm path length) thermostatted at 25 °C in a Spex FluoroMax
spectrofluorimeter). All spectra were corrected for contributions from
the solution.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
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Here, we provide two examples of proteins whose unfolded ensemble dominates in buffer, but in the presence of TMAO are forced to fold into native-like species having significant functional activity. The first of these two protein examples is RCAM-T1, whose unfolded state is favored by a large gain in conformational entropy derived from disruption of disulfide bonds. With RNase T1, it has been estimated that reduction and carboxyamidation of its two disulfide bonds (RCAM-T1) destabilizes the protein by nearly 9 kcal/mol, resulting in a chemically modified protein that is extensively unfolded (17). Size exclusion chromatography experiments in Fig. 1A show, from the elution volumes of RNase T1 and RCAM-T1, that RCAM-T1 has a significantly expanded structure relative to RNase T1. At TMAO concentration above 2.5 M, both RNase T1 and RCAM-T1 are found to have identical elution volumes (see Fig. 1B), indicating that the two proteins have identical degrees of structural compactness under these conditions. The close correspondence of the fluorescence emission spectra of RCAM-T1 in buffer and RNase T1 in 6 M guanidinium chloride strongly indicates extensive unfolding in both cases (Fig. 2A). But in the presence of 2.7 M TMAO, the fluorescence emission spectrum of RCAM-T1 changes dramatically to that of native RNase T1. This result shows that both wt RNase T1 and RCAM-T1 are folded in the presence of 2.7 M TMAO and that both are essentially equivalent in terms of their fluorescence properties. The fluorescence emission data of RCAM-T1 given as a function of TMAO concentration in Fig. 2B illustrates that TMAO induces RCAM-T1 to fold in a cooperative manner, reaching a maximum in folding at concentrations above 2.5 M TMAO.
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Using GpC as a substrate, the specific activity of RNase T1 is not
observed to change substantially as a function of TMAO concentration
(see Fig. 2C). By contrast, the specific activity of RCAM-T1
increases some 50-fold from its level of around 0.4% of the specific
activity of wt RNase T1 in the absence of TMAO, to a specific activity
in 2.7 M TMAO that is approximately 20% of the wt RNase T1
enzyme under these conditions. So, despite the fact that the folding of
RCAM-T1 accommodates four carboxyamido groups into its compact
structure, a substantial amount of catalytic activity is observed for
this protein. It is important to note that regardless of the parameter
used in monitoring the stability of the protein (fluorescence or
specific activity), the sign and magnitude of the
G0 values derived from the data in Fig. 2,
B and C, show RCAM-T1 is thermodynamically
unstable in buffer solution (
G0 =
2.23
kcal/mol (m =
1.77) from fluorescence data,
G0 =
2.48 kcal/mol (m =
1.70) from activity measurement).
In terms of secondary and tertiary structure, Figs. 3, A and B, illustrate that spectrally, RCAM-T1 is dramatically different from RNase T1. But in the presence of 2.7 M TMAO, the secondary (Fig. 3A) and tertiary (Fig. 3B) folded characteristics of RCAM-T1 become very much like those of native RNase T1, indicating that the overall fold of RCAM-T1 in TMAO is very similar to that of wild type RNase T1.
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In the case of RCAM-T1, the denatured state is favored by the increase
in entropy of the denatured state, brought about by disruption of the
disulfide bonds. Protein destabilization can also be brought about by
mutations that specifically destabilize the native state while having
much less of an effect on the denatured ensemble. Such is the case with
the SNase mutant T62P, which we present as another example of TMAO
induced protein folding. The native state of the SNase mutant is
extensively disrupted by putting proline in the center of the helix
that is packed against the protein's sheet. The fact that the
fluorescence emission spectrum of T62P in buffer is very much like that
of wt SNase obtained in the presence of 6 M guanidinium
chloride (see Fig. 4A)
illustrates that T62P is intrinsically unfolded in buffer solution.
Upon gel filtration chromatography, the elution volume of T62P in
buffer is equivalent to a protein with an apparent molecular mass of 34 kDa, while the elution volume of wt SNase (molecular mass of 17 kDa) is
equivalent to a protein of 16 kDa (data not shown). However, upon
dialyzing T62P against 2.5 M TMAO in buffer, the emission
spectrum of mutant protein changes dramatically, giving a fluorescence
wavelength maximum equal to that of wt SNase native protein (Fig.
4A). In comparison with the wt SNase fluorescence spectrum,
T62P exhibits a lower quantum yield. The lower quantum yield of T62P
arises from protein-protein association and may also be due to
differences in the folded structures of the mutant and wt SNase.
Regardless of the reasons for fluorescence differences between wt SNase
and T62P, these data strongly suggest that TMAO forces T62P to
fold.
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The specific activity of T62P in the absence of TMAO is 0.08% of wt
SNase, but in the presence of increasing amounts of TMAO, the specific
activity of T62P increases some 2 orders of magnitude. The specific
activity of T62P increases to about 90% of the specific activity of wt
SNase in 2.7 M TMAO, while the specific activity of wt
SNase itself decreases by about an order of magnitude in going from 0 to 2.7 M TMAO (see Fig. 4B). If the specific
activity of T62P is normalized to the specific activity of wt SNase,
the normalized data in Fig. 4B can be fitted in the same
manner as described for RCAM-T1. Fitting gives
G0 =
4.02 kcal/mol (m =
2.55) and the large negative
G0 shows that
the fraction of folded (active) T62P is extremely small in the absence
of TMAO. Moreover,
G changes from
4.0 kcal/mol in
buffer solution to +2.9 kcal/mol in 2.7 M TMAO, which
represents a shift in equilibrium from the unfolded ensemble to
"native" state of nearly 5 orders of magnitude.
TMAO induces both RCAM-T1 and T62P to fold, despite the fact that their folding motifs are very different, and their reasons for being unfolded (loss of disulfide bonds in RCAM-T1 and destabilization of the native state in T62P) are also very different. The ability to force proteins to fold, regardless of the source of the instability, suggests TMAO is a versatile folding agent, a property compatible with its role in elasmobranchs (13).
By means of transfer free energy measurements, we have recently shown that the ability of TMAO to increase the driving force for protein folding is due to its solvophobic effect on the peptide backbone exposed in the unfolded state (13). Folding of thermodynamically unstable protein can be forced by a number of naturally occurring osmolytes, and the efficacy of these osmolytes in folding is related to the relative strengths of their solvophobic effect on the peptide backbone, with TMAO being the most effective osmolyte.2 The recent demonstration that synthetic polymers assume helical structures through the action of solvophobic effects highlights the importance of this force (18). In addition, it has long been known that organic solutes (e.g. chloroethanol and trifluoroethanol) can drive formation of helices in peptides and proteins, but this leads to non-native species (19). The driving force for helix formation has been attributed to the solvophobic (highly unfavorable) interaction of alcohol with the peptide backbone, in combination with favorable alcohol-side chain interactions (20). Our measurements show that the exposed (hydrophobic) side chains are little affected by TMAO, and in fact, the propensities of hydrophobic groups to interact with solvent are essentially the same in water as they are in TMAO solution (13). The commonly held explanation of spontaneous folding of proteins in dilute buffer stresses hydrophobic interactions as important in folding to the native state (11), and because TMAO has little effect on hydrophobic interactions, the rules for protein folding that occur in dilute buffer are unchanged by the presence of TMAO. The solvophobic effect of TMAO on the peptide backbone makes the unfolded state of protein in osmolyte solution very unfavorable relative to the folded state (21), and it is this strongly destabilizing effect of TMAO on the unfolded state that forces the protein to fold.
Based on our results and the results of others, there are two distinctly different mechanisms to force intrinsically unstable proteins to fold: one is to lower the Gibbs energy of the native state by using the binding energy of ligands to drive folding (UL and NL in Scheme 1) (1, 22) and the other is to make use of the solvophobic effect of osmolytes on the peptide backbone to raise the free energy of unfolded state higher than that of native protein (UTMAO and NTMAO in Scheme 1) (13). Examples of folding being driven by ligand binding include proteins with disordered domains that are induced to fold on binding DNA (1, 23, 24), the case of the (unstructured) prodomain of subtilisin being induced to fold when complexed with subtilisin (25, 26), and several cases of preferential anion and/or cation binding to the native state of some proteins (23, 27), shifting the equilibrium in favor of the folded state. According to the induced-fit model, ligand binding provides the driving forces for folding and the ligand serves as a template for the disordered domain to adopt its final conformation (1, 28). Since TMAO induces folding not by binding but by solvophobic effects on the backbone, it may be possible to use TMAO to determine the extent to which the induced-fit model of folding is applicable.
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For the purpose of forcing proteins to fold, there is considerable advantage in leaving the side chain forces alone while using the unfavorable interaction between osmolyte and backbone as an additional force for folding. The principal advantages are: 1) the backbone is the most numerous functional group in proteins so focusing on the backbone ensures that the effect of the osmolyte is generic in scope, and 2) when the side chain forces are the same in TMAO as in buffer, the tendency will be to fold the protein to the same native species that prevails in buffer. As can be seen from the examples, significant advantage can be taken of these properties for the study of proteins that are intrinsically unstable or partially folded.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We are indebted to Dr. N. Pace for providing ribonuclease T1 and to Dr. W. Stites for providing the strains of E. coli for overexpression of SNase mutant T62P.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported by NIGMS Grant 49760 and The Sealy Foundation.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 409-772-0754;
Fax: 409-747-4751; E-mail: wbolen{at}hbcg.utmb.edu.
1 The abbreviations used are: TMAO, trimethylamine N-oxide; RCAM-T1, reduced and carboxyamidated ribonuclease T1; MOPS, 4-morpholinepropanesulfonic acid; wt, wild type; SNase, staphylococcal nuclease T62P, SNase mutant protein.
2 I. Baskakov and D. W. Bolen, manuscript in preparation.
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REFERENCES |
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