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Published May 3, 2005 | public
Journal Article

Characterization of Kinetic Folding Intermediates of Recombinant Canine Milk Lysozyme by Stopped-Flow Circular Dichroism

Abstract

The intermediate in the equilibrium unfolding of canine milk lysozyme induced by a denaturant is known to be very stable with characteristics of the molten globule state. Furthermore, there are at least two kinetic intermediates during refolding of this protein:  a burst-phase (first) intermediate formed within the dead time of stopped-flow measurements and a second intermediate that accumulates with a rate constant of 22 s-1. To clarify the relationships of these intermediates with the equilibrium intermediate, and also to characterize the structural changes of the protein during refolding, here we studied the kinetic refolding reactions using stopped-flow circular dichroism at 10 different wavelengths and obtained the circular dichroism spectra of the intermediates. Comparison of the circular dichroism spectra of the intermediates, as well as the absence of observed kinetics in the refolding from the fully unfolded state to the equilibrium intermediate, has demonstrated that the burst-phase intermediate is equivalent to the equilibrium intermediate. The difference circular dichroism spectrum that represented changes from the kinetic intermediate to the native state had characteristics of an exciton coupling band, indicating that specific packing of tryptophan residues in this protein occurred in this phase. From these findings, we propose a schematic model of the refolding of canine milk lysozyme that is consistent with the hierarchical mechanism of protein folding.

Additional Information

© 2005 American Chemical Society. Received 14 January 2005. Published online 7 April 2005. Published in print 1 May 2005. This work was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research in Priority Areas (15076201) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Science and Technology of Japan. We thank Mr. Takayuki Morimoto for his help in the preparation of canine milk lysozyme.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023