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Daniel Otzen

dao@inano.dk

Journal articles

2008
 
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Christensen, Pedersen, Christiansen, Otzen (2008)  Spectroscopic evidence for the existence of an obligate pre-fibrillar oligomer during glucagon fibrillation.   FEBS Lett Mar  
Abstract: The 29-residue peptide hormone glucagon has been used as a model system for the study of amyloid-like fibrils. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) studies have detected putative oligomeric species during this lag phase, but this has not been confirmed by any spectroscopic technique. Here we use an attached pyrene group to detect association (excimer formation) between individual glucagon molecules. Our data show that excimer formation precedes fibrillation both at different pHs and with sulfate, and support our original proposal that glucagon fibril formation is preceded by oligomer formation. We suggest that pyrene-labelling may be a useful way to monitor oligomer formation during protein fibrillation.
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D Otzen, P H Nielsen (2008)  We find them here, we find them there: Functional bacterial amyloid.   Cell Mol Life Sci 65: 6. 910-927 Mar  
Abstract: Protein amyloid is often deposited in connection with neurodegenerative diseases. Such deposits generally possess three principal drawbacks: cytotoxicity, lack of spatial control in their deposition and structural polymorphism. These are typical features of biologically non-optimized systems which have not been exposed to evolutionary pressure. Nevertheless, Nature uses the cross-beta self-organizing principle in many structural contexts where a strong but pliable material is needed. Functional amyloid is found in humans, invertebrates, fungi and, not least, bacteria, in which amyloid may be the rule rather than the exception. Detailed case studies reveal how directed nucleation can use tailor-made proteins optimized to assume a specific amyloid conformation, leading to remarkably robust assemblies. This makes it highly challenging to purify and analyze the products formed in vivo. We contrast pathogenic and in-vitro-formed amyloid with functional amyloid, paying particular reference to bacterial amyloid, and discuss challenges and perspectives in identifying and characterizing this class of protein. We seek them here, we seek them there, We scientists seek them everywhere: Are they our heaven, are they our hell? Those damned elusive strands in that fibril! Adapted from The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness d'Orczy.
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Poul Larsen, Jeppe Lund Nielsen, Daniel Otzen, Per Halkjaer Nielsen (2008)  Amyloid-like adhesins produced by floc-forming and filamentous bacteria in activated sludge.   Appl Environ Microbiol 74: 5. 1517-1526 Mar  
Abstract: Amyloid proteins (fimbriae or other microbial surface-associated structures) are expressed by many types of bacteria, not yet identified, in biofilms from various habitats, where they likely are of key importance to biofilm formation and biofilm properties. As these amyloids are potentially of great importance to the floc properties in activated sludge wastewater treatment plants (WWTP), the abundance of amyloid adhesins in activated sludge flocs from different WWTP and the identity of bacteria producing these were investigated. Amyloid adhesins were quantified using a combination of conformationally specific antibodies targeting amyloid fibrils, propidium iodide to target all fixed bacterial cells, confocal laser scanning microscopy, and digital image analysis. The biovolume fraction containing amyloid adhesins ranged from 10 to 40% in activated sludge from 10 different WWTP. The identity of bacteria producing amyloid adhesins was determined using fluorescence in situ hybridization with oligonucleotide probes in combination with antibodies or thioflavin T staining. Among the microcolony-forming bacteria, amyloids were primarily detected among Alpha- and Betaproteobacteria and Actinobacteria. A more detailed analysis revealed that many denitrifiers (from Thauera, Azoarcus, Zoogloea, and Aquaspirillum-related organisms) and Actinobacteria-related polyphosphate-accumulating organisms most likely produced amyloid adhesins, whereas nitrifiers did not. Many filamentous bacteria also expressed amyloid adhesins, including several Alphaproteobacteria (e.g., Meganema perideroedes), some Betaproteobacteria (e.g., Aquaspirillum-related filaments), Gammaproteobacteria (Thiothrix), Bacteroidetes, Chloroflexi (e.g., Eikelboom type 1851), and some foam-forming Actinobacteria (e.g., Gordonia amarae). The results show that amyloid adhesins were an abundant component of activated sludge extracellular polymeric substances and seem to have unexpected, divers functions.
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Otzen (2008)  Differential adsorption of variants of the Thermomyces lanuginosus lipase on a hydrophobic surface suggests a role for local flexibility.   Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces Feb  
Abstract: Lipases are activated at interfaces between aqueous and hydrophobic phases, where they typically undergo conformational changes leading to significant activity increase. Here I use a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) to study changes in layer thickness and viscosity during the adsorption of variants of the Thermomyces lanuginosus lipase (TlL) onto a methyl-terminated hydrophobic surface. Unlike wildtype TlL, the variant Mut1, which shows improved performance under certain test conditions, shows a large dissipation increase during the binding process, leading to a significantly thicker layer. This altered adsorption behaviour may be linked to Mut1's changes in secondary structure. This is corroborated by the fact that four other TlL mutants with unaltered secondary structure showed wildtype-like absorption behaviour. Unlike wildtype TlL and the other variants, Mut1 contains several consecutive basic residues introduced into the C-terminal region which is close in space to the N-terminal part of the protein, which also contains several basic residues. Electrostatic repulsion between these two regions leading to local structural flexibility may facilitate altered adsorption behaviour and ultimately to improved enzymatic performance on a solid surface. QCM-D thus provides a good approach to screen protein variants for their adsorption properties on hydrophobic surfaces.
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Kell K Andersen, Peter Westh, Daniel E Otzen (2008)  Global study of myoglobin-surfactant interactions.   Langmuir 24: 2. 399-407 Jan  
Abstract: Surfactants interact with proteins in multifarious ways which depend on surfactant concentration and structure. To obtain a global overview of this process, we have analyzed the interaction of horse myoglobin (Mb) with an anionic (SDS) and cationic (CTAC) surfactant, using both equilibrium titration techniques and stopped-flow kinetics. Binding and kinetics of conformational changes can be divided into a number of different regions (five below the cmc and one above) with very distinct features (broadly similar between the two surfactants, despite their difference in head group and chain length), which nuance the classical view of biphasic binding prior to micellization. In stage A, fairly weak interactions lead to a linear decrease in thermal stability. This gives way to a more cooperative process in stage B, where aggregates (presumably hemimicelles) start to form on the protein surface, leading to global denaturation (loss of a thermal transition) and biphasic unfolding kinetics. This is consolidated in stage C with titratable surfactant adsorption. Adsorption of this surfactant species leads to significant changes in kinetics, namely, inhibition of unfolding kinetics in CTAC and altered unfolding amplitudes in SDS, though the process is still biphasic in both surfactants. Stage D commences the reduction in exothermic binding signals, leading to further uptake of 5 (SDS) or 31 (CTAC) surfactant molecules without any major changes in protein conformation. In stage E many more surfactant molecules (46 SDS and 39 CTAC) are bound, presumably as quasi-micellar structures, and we observe a very slow unfolding phase in SDS, which disappears as we reach the cmc. Above the cmc, the unfolding rates remain essentially constant in SDS, but increase significantly in CTAC, possibly because binding of bulk micelles removes the inhibition by hemimicellar aggregates. Our work highlights the fascinating richness of conformational changes that proteins can undergo in the presence of molecules with self-assembling properties.
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Jesper S Pedersen, Daniel E Otzen (2008)  Amyloid-a state in many guises: survival of the fittest fibril fold.   Protein Sci 17: 1. 2-10 Jan  
Abstract: Under appropriate conditions, essentially all proteins are able to aggregate to form long, well-ordered and beta-sheet-rich arrays known as amyloid-like fibrils. These fibrils consist of varying numbers of intertwined protofibrils and can for any given protein exhibit a wealth of different forms at the ultrastructural level. Traditionally, this structural variability or polymorphism has been attributed to differences in the assembly of a common protofibril structure. However, recent work on glucagon, insulin, and the Abeta peptide suggests that this polymorphism can occur at the level of secondary structure. Simple variations in either solvent conditions such as temperature, protein concentration, and ionic strength or external mechanical influences such as agitation can lead to formation of fibrils with markedly different characteristics. In some cases, these characteristics can be passed on to new fibrils in a strain-specific manner, similar to what is known for prions. The preferred structure of fibrils formed can be explained in terms of selective pressure and survival of the fittest; the most populated types of fibrils we observe at the end of an experiment are those that had the fastest overall growth rate under the given conditions. Fibrillar polymorphism is probably a consequence of the lack of structural restraints on a nonfunctional conformational state.
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Daniel E Otzen, Lise W Nesgaard, Kell K Andersen, Jonas Høeg Hansen, Gunna Christiansen, Hidekazu Doe, Pankaj Sehgal (2008)  Aggregation of S6 in a quasi-native state by sub-micellar SDS.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1784: 2. 400-414 Feb  
Abstract: Anionic surfaces promote protein fibrillation in vitro and in vivo. Monomeric SDS has also been shown to stimulate this process. We describe the dynamics of conformational changes and aggregative properties of the model protein S6 at sub-micellar SDS concentrations. S6 exhibits a rich and pH-sensitive diversity in conformational changes around 0.2-2 mM SDS, in which several transitions occur over time scales spanning milliseconds to hours. Monomeric SDS readily precipitates S6 within minutes at pH-values of 5 and below to form states able to bind the fibril-specific dye thioflavin T. At pH 5.5, the process is much slower and shows a mutagenesis-sensitive lag, leading to different forms of organized but not classically fibrillar aggregates with native-like levels of secondary structure, although the tertiary structure is significantly rearranged. The slow aggregation process may be linked to conformational changes that occur at the second-time scale in the same SDS concentration range, leading to an altered structure, possibly with unfolding around the C-terminal helix. The S6 aggregates may be differently trapped states, equivalent to pre-fibrillar structures seen at early stages in the fibrillation process for other proteins. The low quantities of anionic species required suggest that the aggregates may have parallels in vivo.
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Baptista, Pedersen, Cabrita, Otzen, Cabral, Melo (2008)  Thermodynamics and mechanism of cutinase stabilization by trehalose.   Biopolymers 89: 6. 538-547 Jan  
Abstract: Trehalose has been widely used to stabilize cellular structures such as membranes and proteins. The effect of trehalose on the stability of the enzyme cutinase was studied. Thermal unfolding of cutinase reveals that trehalose delays thermal unfolding, thus increasing the temperature at the midpoint of unfolding by 7.2 degrees . Despite this stabilizing effect, trehalose also favors pathways that lead to irreversible denaturation. Stopped-flow kinetics of cutinase folding and unfolding was measured and temperature was introduced as experimental variable to assess the mechanism and thermodynamics of protein stabilization by trehalose. The main stabilizing effect of trehalose was to delay the rate constant of the unfolding of an intermediate. A full thermodynamic analysis of this step has revealed that trehalose induces the phenomenon of entropy-enthalpy compensation, but the enthalpic contribution increases more significantly leading to a net stabilizing effect that slows down unfolding of the intermediate. Regarding the molecular mechanism of stabilization, trehalose increases the compactness of the unfolded state. The conformational space accessible to the unfolded state decreases in the presence of trehalose when the unfolded state acquires residual native interactions that channel the folding of the protein. This residual structure results into less hydrophobic groups being newly exposed upon unfolding, as less water molecules are immobilized upon unfolding. (c) 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 89: 538-547, 2008.This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The "Published Online" date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com.
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Svane, Jahn, Deva, Malmendal, Otzen, Dittmer, Nielsen (2008)  Early Stages of Amyloid Fibril Formation Studied by Liquid-State NMR: The Peptide Hormone Glucagon.   Biophys J Mar  
Abstract: The 29-residue peptide hormone glucagon forms amyloid fibrils within a few hours at low pH. In this study, we use glucagon as a model system to investigate fibril formation by liquid-state (1)H NMR spectroscopy One-dimensional as well as correlation and diffusion experiments monitoring the fibril formation process provide insight into the early stages of the pathway, on which the molecules aggregate to fibrils. In conjunction with this, exchange experiments give information about the end-state conformation. Within the limits of detection there are no signs of larger oligomeric intermediates in the course of the fibril formation process. Kinetic information is extracted from the time course of the signal decay of the residual free glucagons. This suggests that glucagon amyloids form by a nucleated growth mechanism, in which trimers (rather than monomers) of glucagon interact directly with the growing fibrils, as opposed to interacting with each other. The results of proton/deuterium exchange experiments on mature fibrils with subsequent dissolution show that the N-terminal of glucagon is least amenable to exchange, which indicates that this part is strongly involved in the intermolecular bonds of the fibrils.
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Knudsen, Stensballe, Franzmann, Westergaard, Otzen (2008)  Effect of glycosylation on the extracellular domain of the Ag43 bacterial autotransporter: enhanced stability and reduced cellular aggregation.   Biochem J Mar  
Abstract: Autotransporters constitute the biggest group of secreted proteins in Gram-negative bacteria and contain a membrane-bound beta-domain and an alpha-domain secreted to the extracellular environment via an unusually long N-terminal sequence. Several alpha-domains are known to be glycosylated by cytosolic glycosyl transferases, promoting bacterial attachment to mammalian cells. Here we describe the effect of glycosylation on the extracellular alpha-domain of the E. coli autotransporter Ag43alpha, which induces frizzy colony morphology and cell settling. We identify 16 glycosylation sites and suggest two possible glycosylation motifs for Ser and Thr. To our knowledge this is the first bacterial glycosylation sequence analysis. Glycosylation stabilizes against thermal and chemical denaturation and increases refolding kinetics. Unexpectedly, glycosylation also reduces the stabilizing effect of Ca2+ ions, removes the ability of Ca2+ to promote cell adhesion, reduces the ability of Ag43alpha-containing cells to form bacterial amyloid and increases the susceptibility of the resulting amyloid to proteolysis. In addition, our data indicate that Ag43alpha folds without a stable intermediate, unlike pertactin, indicating that autotransporters may arrive at the native state by a variety of different mechanisms despite a common overall structure. A small but significant fraction of Ag43alpha can survive intact in the periplasm if expressed without the beta-domain, suggesting that it is able to adopt a protease-resistant structure prior to translocation over the membrane. Our work demonstrates that glycosylation may play significant roles in structural and functional properties of bacterial autotransporters at many different levels.
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Giehm, Christensen, Boas, Heegaard, Otzen (2008)  Dendrimers destabilize proteins in a generation-dependent manner involving electrostatic interactions.   Biopolymers 89: 6. 522-529 Jan  
Abstract: Dendrimers are well-defined chemical polymers with a characteristic branching pattern that gives rise to attractive features such as antibacterial and antitumor activities as well as drug delivery properties. In addition, dendrimers can solubilize prion protein aggregates at very low concentrations, but their mode of action is unclear. We show that poly(propylene imine) dendrimers based on di-aminobutane (DAB) and modified with guanidinium surface groups reduce insulin thermostability and solubility considerably at microgram per microliter concentrations, while urea-modified groups have hardly any effect. Destabilization is markedly generation-dependent and is most pronounced for generation 3, which is also the most efficient at precipitating insulin. This suggests that proteins can interact with both dendrimer surface and interior. The pH-dependence reveals that interactions are mainly mediated by electrostatics, confirmed by studies on four other proteins. Ability to precipitate and destabilize are positively correlated, in contrast to conventional small-molecule denaturants and stabilizers, indicating that surface immobilization of denaturing groups profoundly affects its interactions with proteins. (c) 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 89: 522-529, 2008.This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The "Published Online" date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com.
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2007
 
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Trine K Dalsgaard, Daniel Otzen, Jacob H Nielsen, Lotte B Larsen (2007)  Changes in structures of milk proteins upon photo-oxidation.   J Agric Food Chem 55: 26. 10968-10976 Dec  
Abstract: Changes in protein structures as a result of riboflavin-induced photo-oxidation were studied for six milk proteins: alpha-casein, beta-casein, kappa-casein, lactoferrin, alpha-lactalbumin, and beta-lactoglobulin. The milk proteins showed significant variability in sensitivity to photo-oxidation. After photo-oxidation, an increase in carbonyl content because of oxidation of tryptophan, histidine, and methionine, as well as formation of dityrosine, was observed for all proteins studied, although at very different levels. Generally, the increment was highest for alpha- and beta-casein and was lowest for lactoferrin. Loss of tryptophan because of photo-oxidation was well-correlated with the formation of the tryptophan oxidation products, N-formylkynurenine and kynurenine. Changes at the tertiary protein structure level were observed after photo-oxidation of the globular proteins, where tryptophan fluorescence emission indicated unfolding of alpha-lactalbumin and beta-lactoglobulin, whereas lactoferrin achieved a more compact tertiary structure. Changes in secondary structure were observed for alpha-lactalbumin and beta-lactoglobulin, whereas the secondary structure of lactoferrin did not change. Polymerization of alpha- and beta-casein and of lactoferrin was observed, whereas kappa-casein, alpha-lactalbumin, and beta-lactoglobulin showed little tendency to polymerize after photo-oxidation. Lability toward photo-oxidation is discussed according to the structural stabilities of the globular proteins.
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Poul Larsen, Jeppe Lund Nielsen, Morten Simonsen Dueholm, Ronald Wetzel, Daniel Otzen, Per Halkjaer Nielsen (2007)  Amyloid adhesins are abundant in natural biofilms.   Environ Microbiol 9: 12. 3077-3090 Dec  
Abstract: Surface-associated amyloid fibrils have been described by bacteria in the family Enterbacteriaceae, but it is unknown to what extent amyloid adhesins are present in natural biofilms. In this study, amyloid adhesins were specifically stained with Thioflavin T and two conformationally specific antibodies targeting amyloid fibrils. These three independent detection methods were each combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization using fluorescently labelled oligonucleotide probes in order to link phenotype with identity. Escherichia coli mutants with and without amyloid adhesins (curli) served as controls. In biofilms from four different natural habitats, bacteria producing extracellular amyloid adhesins were identified within several phyla: Proteobacteria (Alpha-, Beta-, Gamma- and Deltaproteobacteria), Bacteriodetes, Chloroflexi and Actinobacteria, and most likely also in other phyla. Quantification of the microorganisms producing amyloid adhesins showed that they constituted at least 5-40% of all prokaryotes present in the biofilms, depending on the habitat. Particularly in drinking water biofilms, a high number of amyloid-positive bacteria were identified. Production of amyloids was confirmed by environmental isolates belonging to the Gammaproteobacteria, Bacteriodetes, Firmicutes and Actinobacteria. The new approach is a very useful tool for further culture-independent studies in mixed microbial communities, where the abundance and diversity of bacteria expressing amyloid adhesins seems much greater than hitherto anticipated.
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Christian Beyschau Andersen, Daniel Otzen, Gunna Christiansen, Christian Rischel (2007)  Glucagon amyloid-like fibril morphology is selected via morphology-dependent growth inhibition.   Biochemistry 46: 24. 7314-7324 Jun  
Abstract: The 29-residue peptide hormone glucagon readily fibrillates at low pH, but the structure and morphology of the fibrils are very sensitive to the environmental conditions. Here we have investigated the mechanism behind the differences in morphology observed when glucagon fibrils are formed at different peptide concentrations. Electron microscopy shows that fibrils formed at low glucagon concentration (0.25 mg/mL) are twisted, while fibrils formed at high concentration (8 mg/mL) are straight. Monitoring the fibrillation kinetics at different concentrations, we find that the lag time has an unexpected maximum at a concentration of 1 mg/mL, with faster fibrillation at both lower and higher concentrations. Seeding experiments show that small amounts of straight fibril seeds can accelerate fibril growth at both low and high glucagon concentration, while twisted fibril seeds cannot grow at high concentrations. We conclude that there exists a morphology-dependent mechanism for inhibition of glucagon fibril growth. Light scattering experiments indicate that glucagon is mainly monomeric below 1 mg/mL and increasingly trimeric above this concentration. We propose that the glucagon trimer is able to specifically inhibit growth of the twisted fibril morphology. Such inhibitory binding of molecules in an unproductive conformation could also play a role in the selection of morphologies for other fibril-forming peptides and proteins.
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Yun Ju C Song, Ditte M S Lundvig, Yue Huang, Wei Ping Gai, Peter C Blumbergs, Peter Højrup, Daniel Otzen, Glenda M Halliday, Poul H Jensen (2007)  p25alpha relocalizes in oligodendroglia from myelin to cytoplasmic inclusions in multiple system atrophy.   Am J Pathol 171: 4. 1291-1303 Oct  
Abstract: p25alpha is an oligodendroglial protein that can induce aggregation of alpha-synuclein and accumulates in oligodendroglial cell bodies containing fibrillized alpha-synuclein in the neurodegenerative disease multiple system atrophy (MSA). We demonstrate biochemically that p25alpha is a constituent of myelin and a high-affinity ligand for myelin basic protein (MBP), and in situ immunohistochemistry revealed that MBP and p25alpha colocalize in myelin in normal human brains. Analysis of MSA cases reveals dramatic changes in p25alpha and MBP throughout the course of the disease. In situ immunohistochemistry revealed a cellular redistribution of p25alpha immunoreactivity from the myelin to the oligodendroglial cell soma, with no overall change in p25alpha protein concentration using immunoblotting. Concomitantly, an approximately 80% reduction in the concentration of full-length MBP protein was revealed by immunoblotting along with the presence of immunoreactivity for MBP degradation products in oligodendroglia. The oligodendroglial cell bodies in MSA displayed an enlargement along with the relocalization of p25alpha, and this was enhanced after the deposition of alpha-synuclein in the glial cytoplasmic inclusions. Overall, the data indicate that changes in the cellular interactions between MBP and p25alpha occur early in MSA and contribute to abnormalities in myelin and subsequent alpha-synuclein aggregation and the ensuing neuronal degeneration that characterizes this disease.
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Zuzana Valnickova, Steen V Petersen, Søren B Nielsen, Daniel E Otzen, Jan J Enghild (2007)  Heparin binding induces a conformational change in pigment epithelium-derived factor.   J Biol Chem 282: 9. 6661-6667 Mar  
Abstract: Pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF) is a noninhibitory serpin found in plasma and in the extracellular space. The protein is involved in different biological processes including cell differentiation and survival. In addition, it is a potent inhibitor of angiogenesis. The function is likely associated with binding to cell surface receptors in a heparin-dependent way (Alberdi, E. M., Weldon, J. E., and Becerra, S. P. (2003) BMC Biochem. 4, 1). We have investigated the structural basis for this observation and show that heparin induces a conformational change in the vicinity of Lys(178). This structural change was evident both when binding to intact heparin and specific heparin-derived oligosaccharides at physiological conditions or simply when exposing PEDF to low ionic strength. Binding to other glycosaminoglycans, heparin-derived oligosaccharides smaller than hexadecasaccharides (dp16), or type I collagen did not affect the structure of PEDF. The conformational change is likely to expose the epitope involved in binding to the receptor and thus regulates the interactions with cell surface receptors.
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D E Otzen, P Sehgal, L W Nesgaard (2007)  Alternative membrane protein conformations in alcohols.   Biochemistry 46: 14. 4348-4359 Apr  
Abstract: Alcohols modulate the oligomerization of membrane proteins in lipid bilayers. This can occur indirectly by redistributing lateral membrane pressure in a manner which correlates with alcohol hydrophobicity. Here we investigate the direct impact of different alcohol-water mixtures on membrane protein stability and solubility, using the two detergent-solubilized alpha-helical membrane proteins DsbB and NhaA. Both proteins precipitate extensively at intermediate concentrations of alcohols, forming states with extensive (40-60%) beta-sheet structure and affinity for the fibril-specific dye thioflavin T, although atomic force microscopy images reveal layer-like and spherical deposits, possibly early stages in a fibrillation process trapped by strong hydrophobic contacts. At higher alcohol concentrations, both DsbB and NhaA are resolubilized and form non-native structures with increased (DsbB) or decreased (NhaA) helicity compared to the native state. The alternative conformational states cannot be returned to the functional native state upon dilution of alcohol. The efficiency of precipitation and the degree to which DsbB is destabilized at low alcohol concentrations show the same correlation with alcohol hydrophobicity. Thus, in addition to their effect on the membrane, alcohols perturb membrane proteins directly by solvating the hydrophobic regions of the protein. At intermediate concentrations, this perturbation exposes hydrophobic segments but does not provide sufficient solvation to avoid intermolecular association. Resolubilization requires a reduction in the relative dielectric constant below 65 in conjunction with specific properties of the individual alcohols. We conclude that alcohols provide access to a diversity of conformations for membrane proteins but are not a priori suitable for solution studies requiring reversible denaturation of monomeric proteins.
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Mette M Nielsen, Kell K Andersen, Peter Westh, Daniel E Otzen (2007)  Unfolding of beta-sheet proteins in SDS.   Biophys J 92: 10. 3674-3685 May  
Abstract: Beta-sheet proteins are particularly resistant to denaturation by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Here we compare unfolding of two beta-sandwich proteins TNfn3 and TII27 in SDS. The two proteins show different surface electrostatic potential. Correspondingly, TII27 unfolds below the critical micelle concentration via the formation of hemimicelles on the protein surface, whereas TNfn3 only unfolds around the critical micelle concentration. Isothermal titration calorimetry confirms that unfolding of TII27 sets in at lower SDS concentrations, although the total number of bound SDS molecules is similar at the end of unfolding. In mixed micelles with the nonionic detergent dodecyl maltoside, where the concentration of monomeric SDS is insignificant, the behavior of the two proteins converges. TII27 unfolds more slowly than TNfn3 in SDS and follows a two-mode behavior. Additionally TNfn3 shows inhibition of SDS unfolding at intermediate SDS concentrations. Mutagenic analysis suggests that the overall unfolding mechanism is similar to that observed in denaturant for both proteins. Our data confirm the kinetic robustness of beta-sheet proteins toward SDS. We suggest this is related to the inability of SDS to induce significant amounts of alpha-helix structure in these proteins as part of the denaturation process, forcing the protein to denature by global rather than local unfolding.
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Jesper E Mogensen, Mercedes Ferreras, Reinhard Wimmer, Steen V Petersen, Jan J Enghild, Daniel E Otzen (2007)  The major allergen from birch tree pollen, Bet v 1, binds and permeabilizes membranes.   Biochemistry 46: 11. 3356-3365 Mar  
Abstract: The 159 residue Bet v 1 is the major allergen from birch tree pollen. Its natural function is unknown although it is capable of binding several types of physiologically relevant ligands in a centrally placed cavity in the protein structure. Here we use circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy to show that Bet v 1 binds to DOPC and DOPG phospholipid vesicles in a pH-dependent manner. Binding is facilitated by low pH, negatively charged phospholipids, and high vesicle curvature, indicating that electrostatic interactions and vesicle surface defects are important parameters for binding. Binding is accompanied by major structural rearrangements, involving an increase in alpha-helical structure and a decrease in beta-structure. A bilayer structure per se is not a prerequisite for these rearrangements, since they also occur in the presence of the micelle-forming lysophospholipids lysoMPC and lysoMPG. Two major bound states (A and B) with distinct secondary structure compositions were identified, which predominate in the pH ranges approximately 9.5-6.5 and approximately 5-2.5, respectively. Despite the high content of secondary structure, the A- and B-states are partially unfolded as they unfold noncooperatively in CD thermal scans, in contrast to the native state. In addition, the B-state (but not the A-state) shows intermediate proteolysis-resistance and is able to induce complete leakage of calcein from the vesicles, indicating that this state is partially inserted into and significantly perturbs the bilayer structure. We conclude that Bet v 1 is a membrane binding protein, highlighting a possible biological function of this protein.
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Mads Bruun Hovgaard, Mingdong Dong, Daniel Erik Otzen, Flemming Besenbacher (2007)  Quartz crystal microbalance studies of multilayer glucagon fibrillation at the solid-liquid interface.   Biophys J 93: 6. 2162-2169 Sep  
Abstract: We have used a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) to monitor the changes in layer thickness and viscoelastic properties accompanying multilayer amyloid deposition in situ for the first time. By means of atomic force microscope imaging, an unequivocal correlation is established between the interfacial nucleation and growth of glucagon fibrils and the QCM-D response. The combination of the two techniques allows us to study the temporal evolution of the interfacial fibrillation process. We have modeled the QCM-D data using an extension to the Kelvin-Voigt viscoelastic model. Three phases were observed in the fibrillation process: 1), a rigid multilayer of glucagon monomers forms and slowly rearranges; 2), this multilayer subsequently evolves into a dramatically more viscoelastic layer, containing a polymorphic network of micrometer-long fibrils growing from multiple nucleation sites; and 3), the fibrillar formation effectively stops as a result of the depletion of bulk-phase monomers, although the process can be continued without a lag phase by subsequent addition of fresh monomers. The robustness of the QCM-D technique, consolidated by complementary atomic force microscope studies, should make it possible to combine different components thought to be involved in the plaque formation process and thus build up realistic models of amyloid plaque formation in vitro.
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Peter M H Heegaard, Ulrik Boas, Daniel E Otzen (2007)  Dendrimer effects on peptide and protein fibrillation.   Macromol Biosci 7: 8. 1047-1059 Aug  
Abstract: Dendrimers are synthetic, symmetrically branched polymers that can be manufactured to a high degree of definition and therefore present themselves as monodisperse entities. Flexible and globular in shape and compartementalized into a partly inaccessible interior and a highly exposed surface, they offer numerous possibilities for interactions with and responses to biological macromolecules and biostructures including cell membranes and proteins. By way of their multiple functional surface groups, they allow the design of surfaces carrying a multitude of biological motifs and/or charges giving rise to quite significant biological and physico-chemical effects. Here we describe the surprising ability of dendrimers to interact with and perturb polypeptide conformations, particularly efficiently towards amyloid structures; that is, the structures of highly insoluble polypeptide aggregates involved in a range of serious and irreversibly progressive pathological conditions (protein-misfolding diseases). Interesting as this may be, the interaction of dendrimers with such generic peptidic aggregates also offers a new perspective on the molecular mechanisms governing assembly and disassembly of amyloid structures and thereby on determinants of protein and peptide folding. Despite the potent disaggregative nature of various dendrimers, they have variable effects on the stability of different proteins, suggesting that they do not act as generic denaturants, but rather exert their effects via specific interactions with individual parts of each protein.
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Pankaj Sehgal, Søren Bang Nielsen, Shona Pedersen, Reinhard Wimmer, Daniel E Otzen (2007)  Modulation of cutinase stability and structure by phospholipid detergents.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1774: 12. 1544-1554 Dec  
Abstract: Fusarium solani pisi cutinase hydrolyses triglycerides of different lengths. Here we show that micelle-forming short-chain (C6-C9) phospholipids significantly reduce cutinase stability (both below and above the critical micelle concentration cmc) and rates of folding (only above cmc), trapping cutinase in an inactive state which only regains activity over hours to days, rather than the few seconds required for refolding in the absence of detergent. Destabilization decreases with increasing chain length, and increases with cmc, indicating that monomers and micelles cooperate in destabilizing cutinase. Detergents have little effect on enzymatic activity and confer no changes in secondary structure. Some changes in chemical shift occur around the enzyme active site, although distant regions are also affected. To our knowledge, this is the first example of marked destabilization of a water-soluble protein by zwitterionic detergents, highlighting the multitude of different detergent interactions with enzymes that target amphiphilic substrates and providing means of trapping a protein in a metastable state. We propose a model for destabilization where monomers via various binding sites on the native state prime it for interacting with micelles in a destabilizing fashion, whereas only micelles halt refolding due to the absence of these monomer-binding sites in the denatured state.
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Nikolaj K Holm, Stine K Jespersen, Lise V Thomassen, Tine Y Wolff, Pankaj Sehgal, Line A Thomsen, Gunna Christiansen, Christian Beyschau Andersen, Anders D Knudsen, Daniel E Otzen (2007)  Aggregation and fibrillation of bovine serum albumin.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1774: 9. 1128-1138 Sep  
Abstract: The all-alpha helix multi-domain protein bovine serum albumin (BSA) aggregates at elevated temperatures. Here we show that these thermal aggregates have amyloid properties. They bind the fibril-specific dyes Thioflavin T and Congo Red, show elongated although somewhat worm-like morphology and characteristic amyloid X-ray fiber diffraction peaks. Fibrillation occurs over minutes to hours without a lag phase, is independent of seeding and shows only moderate concentration dependence, suggesting intramolecular aggregation nuclei. Nevertheless, multi-exponential increases in dye-binding signal and changes in morphology suggest the existence of different aggregate species. Although beta-sheet content increases from 0 to ca. 40% upon aggregation, the aggregates retain significant amounts of alpha-helix structure, and lack a protease-resistant core. Thus BSA is able to form well-ordered beta-sheet rich aggregates which nevertheless do not possess the same structural rigidity as classical fibrils. The aggregates do not permeabilize synthetic membranes and are not cytotoxic. The ease with which a multidomain all-alpha helix protein can form higher-order beta-sheet structure, while retaining significant amounts of alpha-helix, highlights the universality of the fibrillation mechanism. However, the presence of non-beta-sheet structure may influence the final fibrillar structure and could be a key component in aggregated BSA's lack of cytotoxicity.
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Daniel E Otzen, Lise Giehm, Ricardo P Baptista, Søren R Kristensen, Eduardo P Melo, Shona Pedersen (2007)  Aggregation as the basis for complex behaviour of cutinase in different denaturants.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1774: 2. 323-333 Feb  
Abstract: We have previously described the complexity of the folding of the lipolytic enzyme cutinase from F. solani pisi in guanidinium chloride. Here we extend the refolding analysis by refolding from the pH-denatured state and analyze the folding behaviour in the presence of the weaker denaturant urea and the stronger denaturant guanidinium thiocyanate. In urea there is excellent consistency between equilibrium and kinetic data, and the intermediate accumulating at low denaturant concentrations is off-pathway. However, in GdmCl, refolding rates, and consequently the stability of the native state, vary significantly depending on whether refolding takes place from the pH- or GdmCl-denatured state, possibly due to transient formation of aggregates during folding from the GdmCl-denatured state. In GdmSCN, stability is reduced by several kcal/mol with significant aggregation in the unfolding transition region. The basis for the large variation in folding behaviour may be the denaturants' differential ability to support formation of exposed hydrophobic regions and consequent changes in aggregative properties during refolding.
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2006
 
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Jesper Søndergaard Pedersen, Dantcho Dikov, James L Flink, Hans Aage Hjuler, Gunna Christiansen, Daniel Erik Otzen (2006)  The changing face of glucagon fibrillation: structural polymorphism and conformational imprinting.   J Mol Biol 355: 3. 501-523 Jan  
Abstract: We have established a time-resolved fluorescence assay to study fibrillation of the 29 residue peptide hormone glucagon under a variety of different conditions in a high-throughput format. Fibrils formed at pH 2.5 differ in fibrillation kinetics, morphology, thioflavin T staining and FTIR/CD spectra depending on salts, glucagon concentration and fibrillation temperature. Apparent fibrillar stability correlates with spectral and kinetic properties; generally, fibrils formed under conditions favourable for rapid fibrillation (ambient temperatures, high glucagon concentration or high salt concentration) appear less thermostable than those formed under more challenging conditions (high temperatures, low glucagon or low salt concentrations). Properties of preformed fibrils used for seeding are inherited in a prion-like manner. Thus, we conclude that the structure of fibrils formed by glucagon is not the result of the global energy minimization, but rather kinetically controlled by solvent conditions and seed-imprinting. Fibrillar polymorphism, which is being reported for an increasing number of proteins, probably reflects that fibrils have not been under evolutionary constraints to retain a single active conformation. Our results highlight the complexity of the fibrillation mechanism of glucagon, since even subtle changes in fibrillation conditions can alter the type of fibrils formed, or result in formation of mixtures of several types of fibrils.
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Shona Pedersen, Lise Nesgaard, Ricardo P Baptista, Eduardo P Melo, Søren R Kristensen, Daniel E Otzen (2006)  pH-dependent aggregation of cutinase is efficiently suppressed by 1,8-ANS.   Biopolymers 83: 6. 619-629 Dec  
Abstract: We have studied the thermal stability of the triglyceride-hydrolyzing enzyme cutinase from F. solani pisi at pH values straddling the pI (pH 8.0). At the pI, increasing the protein concentration from 5 to 80 microM decreases the apparent melting temperature by 19 degrees C. This effect vanishes at pH values more than one unit away from pI. In contrast to additives such as detergents and osmolytes, the hydrophobic fluorophore 1,8-ANS completely and saturably suppresses this effect, restoring 70% of enzymatic activity upon cooling. ANS binds strongly to native cutinase as a noncompetitive inhibitor with up to 5 ANS per cutinase molecule. Only the first ANS molecule stabilizes cutinase; however, the last 4 ANS molecules decrease Tm by up to 7 degrees C. Similar pI-dependent aggregation and suppression by ANS is observed for T. lanuginosus lipase, but not for lysozyme or porcine alpha-amylase, suggesting that this behavior is most prevalent for proteins with affinity for hydrophobic substrates and consequent exposure of hydrophobic patches. Aggregation may be promoted by a fluctuating ensemble of native-like states associating via intermolecular beta-sheet rich structures unless blocked by ANS. Our data highlight the chaperone activity of small molecules with affinity for hydrophobic surfaces and their potential application as stabilizers at appropriate stoichiometries.
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Jesper Søndergaard Pedersen, Dancho Dikov, Daniel Erik Otzen (2006)  N- and C-terminal hydrophobic patches are involved in fibrillation of glucagon.   Biochemistry 45: 48. 14503-14512 Dec  
Abstract: Recent work suggests that the molecular structure of amyloid-like fibrils is determined by environmental conditions as well as amino acid sequence. To probe the involvement of side chains in fibrillation of the 29-residue hormone glucagon, we have measured fibrillation kinetics of 15 alanine mutants. At acidic pH, all of the mutants are able to form fibrils. However, substitution of hydrophobic residues in the N- and C-termini (in particular Phe6, Tyr10, Val23, and Met27) decelerates fibrillation dramatically. This indicates that the hydrophobicity and/or high beta-sheet propensity of these residues may be important for fibrillation. In contrast, substitution of Leu14 increases fibrillation propensity compared to that of the wild type. Nevertheless, despite identical fibrillation conditions, the thioflavin T and tryptophan fluorescence spectra of fibrils formed by mutants Tyr13, Leu14, and Asp15 are significantly different from those of other mutants, indicating that substitution of these residues may influence not only the fibrillation kinetics and fibril stability but also the preferred final structure of the fibrils that is formed, in line with the general structural polymorphism of glucagon fibrils. In contrast, under alkaline conditions, only a handful of the alanine mutants are capable of forming fibrils, suggesting that more side chains are involved in stabilizing interactions here. In addition, fibrils formed by wild-type glucagon at alkaline pH appear very stable, compared to fibrils formed at acidic pH. This suggests that the distribution of charges determines the number of different fibrillated states available to a peptide, since these can block formation of metastable fibrillated states.
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Reinhard Wimmer, Kell K Andersen, Brian Vad, Mads Davidsen, Søren Mølgaard, Lise W Nesgaard, Hans H Kristensen, Daniel E Otzen (2006)  Versatile interactions of the antimicrobial peptide novispirin with detergents and lipids.   Biochemistry 45: 2. 481-497 Jan  
Abstract: Novispirin G-10 is an 18-residue designed cationic peptide derived from the N-terminal part of an antimicrobial peptide from sheep. This derivative is more specific for bacteria than the parent peptide. We have analyzed Novispirin's interactions with various amphipathic molecules and find that a remarkably wide variety of conditions induce alpha-helical structure. Optimal structure induction by lipids occurs when the vesicles contain 40-80% anionic lipid, while pure anionic lipid vesicles induce aggregation. SDS also forms aggregates with Novispirin at submicellar concentrations but induces alpha-helical structures above the cmc. Both types of aggregates contain significant amounts of beta-sheet structure, highlighting the peptide's structural versatility. The cationic detergent LTAC has a relatively strong affinity for the cationic peptide despite the peptide's net positive charge of +7 at physiological pH and total lack of negatively charged side chains. Zwitterionic and nonionic detergents induce alpha-helical structures at several hundred millimolar detergent. We have solved the peptide structure in SDS and LTAB by NMR and find subtle differences compared to the structure in TFE, which we ascribe to the interaction with an amphiphilic environment. Novispirin is largely buried in the SDS-micelle, whereas it does not enter the LTAC-micelle but merely forms a dynamic equilibrium between surface-bound and nonbound Novispirin. Thus, electrostatic repulsion can be overruled by relatively high-detergent concentrations or by deprotonating a single critical side chain, despite the fact that Novispirin's ability to bind to amphiphiles and form alpha-helical structure is sensitive to the electrostatics of the amphiphilic environment. This emphasizes the versatility of cationic antimicrobial peptides' interactions with amphiphiles.
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Pankaj Sehgal, Daniel E Otzen (2006)  Thermodynamics of unfolding of an integral membrane protein in mixed micelles.   Protein Sci 15: 4. 890-899 Apr  
Abstract: Quantitative studies of membrane protein folding and unfolding can be difficult because of difficulties with efficient refolding as well as a pronounced propensity to aggregate. However, mixed micelles, consisting of the anionic detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate and the nonionic detergent dodecyl maltoside facilitate reversible and quantitative unfolding and refolding. The 4-transmembrane helix protein DsbB from the inner membrane of Escherichia coli unfolds in mixed micelles according to a three-state mechanism involving an unfolding intermediate I. The temperature dependence of the kinetics of this reaction between 15 degrees and 45 degrees C supports that unfolding from I to the denatured state D is accompanied by a significant decrease in heat capacity. For water-soluble proteins, the heat capacity increases upon unfolding, and this is generally interpreted as the increased binding of water to the protein as it unfolds, exposing more surface area. The decrease in DsbB's heat capacity upon unfolding is confirmed by independent thermal scans. The decrease in heat capacity is not an artifact of the use of mixed micelles, since the water soluble protein S6 shows conventional heat-capacity changes in detergent. We speculate that it reflects the binding of SDS to parts of DsbB that are solvent-exposed in the native DM-bound state. This implies that the periplasmic loops of DsbB are relatively unstructured. This anomalous thermodynamic behavior has not been observed for beta-barrel membrane proteins, probably because they do not bind SDS so extensively. Thus the thermodynamic behavior of membrane proteins appears to be intimately connected to their detergent-binding properties.
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Carmen Finger, Thomas Volkmer, Alexander Prodöhl, Daniel E Otzen, Donald M Engelman, Dirk Schneider (2006)  The stability of transmembrane helix interactions measured in a biological membrane.   J Mol Biol 358: 5. 1221-1228 May  
Abstract: Despite some promising progress in the understanding of membrane protein folding and assembly, there is little experimental information regarding the thermodynamic stability of transmembrane helix interactions and even less on the stability of transmembrane helix-helix interactions in a biological membrane. Here we describe an approach that allows quantitative measurement of transmembrane helix interactions in a biological membrane, and calculation of changes in the interaction free energy resulting from substitution of single amino acids. Dimerization of several variants of the glycophorin A transmembrane domain are characterized and compared to the wild-type (wt) glycophorin A transmembrane helix dimerization. The calculated DeltaDeltaG(app) values are further compared with values found in the literature. In addition, we compare interactions between the wt glycophorin A transmembrane domain and helices in which critical glycine residues are replaced by alanine or serine, respectively. The data demonstrate that replacement of the glycine residues by serine is less destabilizing than replacement by alanine with a DeltaDeltaG(app) value of about 0.4 kcal/mol. Our study comprises the first measurement of a transmembrane helix interaction in a biological membrane, and we are optimistic that it can be further developed and applied.
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LuYang Chen, José A B Ferreira, Sílvia M B Costa, Gonçalo J M Cabrita, Daniel E Otzen, Eduardo Pinho Melo (2006)  Compaction of ribosomal protein S6 by sucrose occurs only under native conditions.   Biochemistry 45: 7. 2189-2199 Feb  
Abstract: The effect of osmolyte sucrose on the stability and compaction of the folded and unfolded states of ribosomal protein S6 from Thermus thermophilus was analyzed. Confirming previous results obtained with sodium sulfate and trehalose, refolding stopped-flow measurements of S6 show that sucrose favors the conversion of the unfolded state ensemble to a highly compact structure (75% as compact as the folded state). This conversion occurs when the unfolded state is suddenly placed under native conditions and the compact state accumulates in a transient off-folding pathway. This effect of sucrose on the compaction of the unfolded state ensemble is counteracted by guanidinium hydrochloride. The compact state does not accumulate at higher guanidinium concentrations and the unfolded state ensemble does not display increased compaction in the presence of 6 M guanidinium as evaluated by collisional quenching of tryptophan fluorescence. In contrast, accessibility of the tryptophan residue of folded S6 above 1 M sucrose concentration decreased as a result of an increased compaction of the folded state. Unfolding stopped-flow measurements of S6 reflect this increased compaction of the folded state, but the unfolding pathway is not affected by sucrose. Compaction of folded and unfolded S6 induced by sucrose occurs under native conditions indicating that decreased protein conformational entropy significantly contributes to the mechanism of protein stabilization by osmolytes.
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Jesper Søndergaard Pedersen, James M Flink, Dantcho Dikov, Daniel Erik Otzen (2006)  Sulfates dramatically stabilize a salt-dependent type of glucagon fibrils.   Biophys J 90: 11. 4181-4194 Jun  
Abstract: Recent work suggests that protein fibrillation mechanisms and the structure of the resulting protein fibrils are very sensitive to environmental conditions such as temperature and ionic strength. Here we report the effect of several inorganic salts on the fibrillation of glucagon. At acidic pH, fibrillation is much less influenced by cations than anions, for which the effects follow the electroselectivity series; e.g., the effect of sulfate is approximately 65-fold higher than that of chloride per mole. Increased salt concentrations generally accelerate fibrillation, but result in formation of an alternate type of fibrils. Stability of these fibrils is highly affected by changes in anion concentration; the apparent melting temperature is increased by approximately 22 degrees C for any 10-fold concentration increase, indicating that the fibrils cannot exist without anions. In contrast, fibrillation under alkaline conditions is more affected by cations than anions. We conclude that ions interact directly as structural ligands with glucagon fibrils where they coordinate charges and assist in formation of new fibrils. As ex vivo amyloid plaques often contain large amounts of highly sulfated organic molecules, the specific effects of sulfate ions on glucagon may have general relevance in the study of amyloidosis and other protein deposition diseases.
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2005
 
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Evo Lindersson, Ditte Lundvig, Christine Petersen, Peder Madsen, Jens R Nyengaard, Peter Højrup, Torben Moos, Daniel Otzen, Wei-Ping Gai, Peter C Blumbergs, Poul Henning Jensen (2005)  p25alpha Stimulates alpha-synuclein aggregation and is co-localized with aggregated alpha-synuclein in alpha-synucleinopathies.   J Biol Chem 280: 7. 5703-5715 Feb  
Abstract: Aggregation of the nerve cell protein alpha-synuclein is a characteristic of the common neurodegenerative alpha-synucleinopathies like Parkinson's disease and Lewy body dementia, and it plays a direct pathogenic role as demonstrated by early onset diseases caused by mis-sense mutations and multiplication of the alpha-synuclein gene. We investigated the existence of alpha-synuclein pro-aggregatory brain proteins whose dysregulation may contribute to disease progression, and we identified the brain-specific p25alpha as a candidate that preferentially binds to alpha-synuclein in its aggregated state. Functionally, purified recombinant human p25alpha strongly stimulates the aggregation of alpha-synuclein in vitro as demonstrated by thioflavin-T fluorescence and quantitative electron microscopy. p25alpha is normally only expressed in oligodendrocytes in contrast to alpha-synuclein, which is normally only expressed in neurons. This expression pattern is changed in alpha-synucleinopathies. In multiple systems atrophy, degenerating oligodendrocytes displayed accumulation of p25alpha and dystopically expressed alpha-synuclein in the glial cytoplasmic inclusions. In Parkinson's disease and Lewy body dementia, p25alpha was detectable in the neuronal Lewy body inclusions along with alpha-synuclein. The localization in alpha-synuclein-containing inclusions was verified biochemically by immunological detection in Lewy body inclusions purified from Lewy body dementia tissue and glial cytoplasmic inclusions purified from tissue from multiple systems atrophy. We suggest that p25alpha plays a pro-aggregatory role in the common neurodegenerative disorders hall-marked by alpha-synuclein aggregates.
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Daniel Otzen (2005)  Antagonism, non-native interactions and non-two-state folding in S6 revealed by double-mutant cycle analysis.   Protein Eng Des Sel 18: 11. 547-557 Nov  
Abstract: When folding to the native state N in the presence of salt, the apparent two-state folder S6 transiently forms a transient off-pathway state C with substantial secondary and tertiary structure. Fifteen double mutant cycles were analysed to compare side-chain interaction energies DeltaDeltaG(int) in C, N and TS (the transition state between N and the denatured state). The kinetic signatures of these destabilizing mutants suggest folding scenarios involving unfolding intermediates and even alternative unfolding pathways. However, restricting the kinetic data to linear parts of the chevron plot allows reliable extrapolation to zero molar denaturant of rate constants of folding, unfolding and misfolding. Side-chain interactions appear to contribute to the stability of C, but in a substantially non-native environment, as shown by changes in the sign of DeltaDeltaG(int) between C and N. Remarkably, there appear to be significant (0.7-2 kcal/mol) antagonistic interactions between the two residues Leu30 and Leu75 in N and TS, which may be linked to subtle structural changes seen in the crystal structures of the mutants. A small number of overlapping residues are involved in these kinds of antagonistic interactions in N, TS and C, suggesting that repulsive interactions are coded into the protein topology whether the protein folds or misfolds. Destabilizing double mutants indicate that apparent two-state folders can be induced to behave in more complex ways provided that the native state is suitably destabilized.
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Jesper E Mogensen, Jörg H Kleinschmidt, M Alexander Schmidt, Daniel E Otzen (2005)  Misfolding of a bacterial autotransporter.   Protein Sci 14: 11. 2814-2827 Nov  
Abstract: The adhesin involved in diffuse adherence (AIDA) is an autotransporter protein that confers the diffuse adherence phenotype to certain diarrheagenic Escherichia coli strains. It consists of a 49 amino acid signal peptide, a 797 amino acid passenger domain, and a 440 amino acid beta-domain integrated into the outer membrane. The beta-domain consists of two parts: the beta(1)-domain, which is predicted to form two beta-strands on the bacterial cell surface, and the beta(2)-domain, which constitutes the transmembrane domain. We have previously shown that the beta-domain can be folded from the urea-denatured state when bound to a nickel column during purification. It has not been possible to achieve proper refolding of the beta-domain in solution; instead, a misfolded state C is formed. Here, we characterize this misfolded state in greater detail, showing that despite being misfolded, C can be analyzed as a conventional conformational state, with cooperative unfolding in urea and SDS as well as showing simple exponential kinetics during its formation in the presence of lipid vesicles and detergent micelles. The kinetics of formation of C is sensitive to the lipid composition in vesicles. We have also attempted to identify biological factors that might aid folding of the beta-domain to the properly folded state. However, no purified periplasmic or cytosolic chaperone was found to increase folding yields, and no factor in a periplasmic extract was identified that could bind to C. We conclude that it is the exposure to the unique spatial arrangement of the bacterial cell that leads to proper refolding of the beta-domain.
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Daniel E Otzen, Ditte M S Lundvig, Reinhard Wimmer, Lotte H Nielsen, Jakob R Pedersen, Poul H Jensen (2005)  p25alpha is flexible but natively folded and binds tubulin with oligomeric stoichiometry.   Protein Sci 14: 6. 1396-1409 Jun  
Abstract: p25alpha is a 219-residue protein which stimulates aberrant tubulin polymerization and is implicated in a variety of other functions. The protein has unusual secondary structure involving significant amounts of random coil, and binding to microtubules is accompanied by a large structural change, suggesting a high degree of plasticity. p25alpha has been proposed to be natively unfolded, so that folding is coupled to interaction with its physiological partners. Here we show that recombinant human p25alpha is folded under physiological conditions, since it has a well structured and solvent-sequestered aromatic environment and considerable chemical shift dispersion of amide and aliphatic protons. With increasing urea concentrations, p25alpha undergoes clear spectral changes suggesting significant loss of structure. p25alpha unfolds cooperatively in urea according to a simple two-state transition with a stability in water of approximately 5 kcal/mol. The protein behaves as a monomer and refolds with a transient on-pathway folding intermediate. However, high sensitivity to proteolytic attack and abnormal gel filtration migration behavior suggests a relatively extended structure, possibly organized in distinct domains. A deletion mutant of p25alpha lacking residues 3-43 also unfolds cooperatively and with similar stability, suggesting that the N-terminal region is largely unstructured. Both proteins undergo significant loss of structure when bound to monomeric tubulin. The stoichiometry of binding is estimated to be 3-4 molecules of tubulin per p25alpha and is not significantly affected by the deletion of residues 3-43. In conclusion, we dismiss the proposal that p25alpha is natively unfolded, although the protein is relatively flexible. This flexibility may be linked to its tubulin-binding properties.
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Sven Frokjaer, Daniel E Otzen (2005)  Protein drug stability: a formulation challenge.   Nat Rev Drug Discov 4: 4. 298-306 Apr  
Abstract: The increasing use of recombinantly expressed therapeutic proteins in the pharmaceutical industry has highlighted issues such as their stability during long-term storage and means of efficacious delivery that avoid adverse immunogenic side effects. Controlled chemical modifications, such as substitutions, acylation and PEGylation, have fulfilled some but not all of their promises, while hydrogels and lipid-based formulations could well be developed into generic delivery systems. Strategies to curb the aggregation and misfolding of proteins during storage are likely to benefit from the recent surge of interest in protein fibrillation. This might in turn lead to generally accepted guidelines and tests to avoid unforeseen adverse effects in drug delivery.
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Jesper E Mogensen, Damini Tapadar, M Alexander Schmidt, Daniel E Otzen (2005)  Barriers to folding of the transmembrane domain of the Escherichia coli autotransporter adhesin involved in diffuse adherence.   Biochemistry 44: 11. 4533-4545 Mar  
Abstract: Adhesin involved in diffuse adherence (AIDA) is an autotransporter protein that confers the diffuse adherence phenotype to certain diarrheagenic Escherichia coli strains. It consists of a 49 amino acid signal peptide, a 797 amino acid passenger domain, and a 440 amino acid beta-domain integrated in the outer membrane. The beta-domain consists of two parts: the beta(1)-domain, which is predicted to form two beta-strands on the bacterial cell surface, and the beta(2)-domain, which constitutes the transmembrane domain. We here present a detailed biophysical analysis of the AIDA beta-domain addressing its refolding properties and its different conformational states and their stability. We find that the beta(2)-domain in solution can fold only when the beta(1)-domain is present and only with 50% efficiency. However, 100% refolding of the beta(2)-domain, with or without the beta(1)-domain, can be achieved in the presence of a solid support. Folding can only take place above the cmc of the detergent used, but the refolded state is retained if diluted below the cmc, revealing a kinetic barrier to dissociation of the detergent molecules from the folded protein. Refolding attempts of the beta(2)-domain in the absence of a solid support result in the formation of an oligomeric misfolded state both in the absence and in the presence of detergent. Despite being misfolded, these states unfold cooperatively with a T(m) approximately 70 degrees C. The refolded protein in the nonionic detergent octylpolyoxyethylene (oPOE) can only be thermally unfolded in the presence of SDS. The linear relationship between SDS mole fraction and unfolding temperature, T(m), predicts a T(m) of 112.9 +/- 1.2 degrees C for the beta(2)-domain and 132.7 +/- 12.2 degrees C for the entire beta-domain in pure oPOE. Thus, the beta(1)-domain also stabilizes the beta(2)-domain. In conclusion, our data show that the in vitro refolding of the AIDA beta-domain is critically dependent on a solid support, suggesting that in vivo specific biological factors may assist in folding the protein correctly into the outer membrane to avoid the formation of stably misfolded conformations.
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Daniel E Otzen (2005)  Conformational detours during folding of a collapsed state.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1750: 2. 146-153 Jun  
Abstract: The protein S6 is a useful model to probe the role of partially folded states in the folding process. In the absence of salt, S6 folds from the denatured state D to the native state N without detectable intermediates. High concentrations of sodium sulfate induce the accumulation of a collapsed state C, which is off the direct folding route. However, the mutation VA85 enables S6 to fold from C directly to N through the transition state TS(C). According to the denaturant dependence of this reaction, TS(C) and C are equally compact, but the data are difficult to deconvolute. Therefore, I have measured the heat capacities (DeltaC(p)) for the D-->C and C-->TS(C) transitions. The DeltaC(p)-values suggest that C needs to increase its surface area in order to fold directly to N. This underlines that it is a misfolded state that can only fold by at least partial unfolding. In contrast to the C-state formed by S6 wildtype, the VA85 C-state is just as compact as the native state, and this may be a prerequisite for direct folding. Individual "gatekeeper" residues may thus play a disproportionately large role in guiding proteins through different folding pathways.
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Jesper E Mogensen, Daniel E Otzen (2005)  Interactions between folding factors and bacterial outer membrane proteins.   Mol Microbiol 57: 2. 326-346 Jul  
Abstract: The outer membrane is the first line of contact between Gram-negative bacteria and their external environment. Embedded in the outer membrane are integral outer membrane proteins (OMPs) that perform a diverse range of tasks. OMPs are synthesized in the cytoplasm and are translocated across the inner membrane and probably diffuse through the periplasm before they are inserted into the outer membrane in a folded and biologically active form. Passage through the periplasm presents a number of challenges, due to the hydrophobic nature of the OMPs and the choice of membranes into which they can insert. Recently, a number of periplasmic proteins and one OMP have been shown to play a role in OMP biogenesis. In this review, we describe what is known about these folding factors and how they function in a biological context. In particular, we focus on how they interact with the OMPs at the molecular level and present a comprehensive overview of data relating to a possible effect on OMP folding yield and kinetics. Furthermore, we discuss the role of lipo-chaperones, i.e. lipopolysaccharide and phospholipids, in OMP folding. Important advances have clearly been made in the field, but much work remains to be done, particularly in terms of describing the biophysical basis for the chaperone-OMP interactions which so intricately regulate OMP biogenesis.
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P Sehgal, J E Mogensen, D E Otzen (2005)  Using micellar mole fractions to assess membrane protein stability in mixed micelles.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1716: 1. 59-68 Oct  
Abstract: The increased focus on the structural and physical properties of membrane proteins has made it critical to develop methods that provide a reliable estimate of membrane protein stability. A simple approach is to monitor the protein's conformational changes in mixed detergent systems, typically consisting of an anionic (denaturing) and non-ionic (non-denaturing) component. Linear correlations between, e.g., the melting temperature and the bulk mole fraction of the anionic component have been observed. However, a potential complication is that the bulk mole fraction is not identical to the mole fraction in the mixed micelle, which is the local environment experienced by the membrane protein. Here, we present an extensive analysis of the thermal stability of the membrane-integrated domain of the outer membrane protein AIDA in the presence of different mixed micelles. In the micelle system SDS-octyl-polyoxyethylene, the melting temperature in the absence of SDS extrapolates to 113 degrees C using bulk mole fractions. However, for mixed micelles involving short-chain detergents or phospholipids, the melting temperature calculated using bulk mole fractions reaches values up to several hundred degrees higher than 113 degrees C and can only be obtained by extrapolation over a narrow mole fraction interval. Furthermore, there is a non-linear relationship between the melting temperature and bulk mole fractions for mixed micelle systems involving cationic detergents (also denaturing). We show that if we instead use the micellar mole fraction as a parameter for denaturing detergent strength, we obtain linear correlations which extrapolate to more or less the same value of the melting temperature. There remains some scatter in the extrapolated values of the melting temperature in different binary systems, which suggest that additional micellar interactions may play a role. Nevertheless, in general terms, the mixed micellar composition is a good parameter to describe the membrane protein's microenvironment. Note, however, that for the mixed micelle system involving SDS and dodecyl maltoside, which has been used by several research groups to determine membrane protein stability, the estimate provided by bulk mole fraction leads to similar values as that of micellar mole fractions.
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Luyang Chen, Gonçalo J M Cabrita, Daniel E Otzen, Eduardo Pinho Melo (2005)  Stabilization of the ribosomal protein S6 by trehalose is counterbalanced by the formation of a putative off-pathway species.   J Mol Biol 351: 2. 402-416 Aug  
Abstract: The effect of trehalose on folding and stability of the small ribosomal protein S6 was studied. Non-disruptive point mutations distributed along the protein structure were analyzed to characterize the stabilizing effect of trehalose and map the folding pathway of S6. On average, the stability of the wild-type and S6 mutants increases by 3 kcal/mol M trehalose. Despite the non-specific thermodynamic stabilization mechanism, trehalose particularly stabilizes the less destabilized mutants. Folding/unfolding kinetics shows clearly that trehalose induces the collapse of the unfolded state to an off-pathway intermediate with non-native diffuse contacts. This state is similar to the collapsed state induced by high concentrations of stabilizing salts, as previously reported. Although it leads to the accumulation of this off-pathway intermediate, trehalose does not change the compactness of the transition state ensemble. Furthermore, the productive folding pathway of S6 is not affected by trehalose as shown by a Phi-value analysis. The unfolded state ensemble of S6 should be more compact in the presence of trehalose and therefore destabilized due to decreased conformational entropy. Increased compaction of the unfolded state ensemble might also occur for more stable mutants of S6, thus explaining the synergistic effect of trehalose and point mutations on protein stabilization.
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Jesper E Mogensen, Pankaj Sehgal, Daniel E Otzen (2005)  Activation, inhibition, and destabilization of Thermomyces lanuginosus lipase by detergents.   Biochemistry 44: 5. 1719-1730 Feb  
Abstract: Lipases catalyze the hydrolysis of triglycerides and are activated at the water-lipid interface. Thus, their interaction with amphiphiles such as detergents is relevant for an understanding of their enzymatic mechanism. In this study, we have characterized the effect of nonionic, anionic, cationic, and zwitterionic detergents on the enzymatic activity and thermal stability of Thermomyces lanuginosus lipase (TlL). For all detergents, low concentrations enhance the activity of TlL toward p-nitrophenyl butyrate by more than an order of magnitude; at higher detergent concentrations, the activity declines, leveling off close to the value measured in the absence of detergent. Surprisingly, these phenomena mainly involve monomeric detergent, as activation and inhibition occur well below the cmc for the nonionic and zwitterionic detergents. For anionic and cationic detergents, activation straddles the monomer-micelle transition. The data can be fitted to a three state interaction model, comprising free TlL in the absence of detergent, an activated complex with TlL at low detergent concentrations, and an enzyme-inhibiting complex at higher concentrations. For detergents with the same headgroup, there is an excellent correspondence between carbon chain length and ability to activate and inhibit TlL. However, the headgroup and number of chains also modulate these effects, dividing the detergents overall into three broad groups with rising activation and inhibition ability, namely, anionic and cationic detergents, nonionic and single-chain zwitterionic detergents, and double-chain zwitterionic detergents. As expected, only anionic and cationic detergents lead to a significant decrease in lipase thermal stability. Since nonionic detergents activate TlL without destabilizing the protein, activation/inhibition and destabilization must be independent processes. We conclude that lipase-detergent interactions occur at many independent levels and are governed by a combination of general and structurally specific interactions. Furthermore, activation of TlL by detergents apparently does not involve the classical interfacial activation phenomenon as monomeric detergent molecules are in most cases responsible for the observed increase in activity.
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2004
 
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Pernille H Justesen, Tina Kristensen, Tony Ebdrup, Daniel Otzen (2004)  Investigating porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 action on vesicles and supported planar bilayers using a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation.   J Colloid Interface Sci 279: 2. 399-409 Nov  
Abstract: We present an investigation of the activity of porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 towards phospholipids. The phospholipids are presented in three different ways, namely as tethered vesicles, intact surface-bound vesicles, and supported planar bilayers (SPBs). The process is followed using a quartz crystal microbalance which measures both the frequency shift and the energy dissipation factor. This technique is very sensitive not only to the mass of the material deposited on the crystal, but also to its viscoelasticity. The breakdown of the phospholipid vesicles and bilayers consequently gives rise to very large signal changes. Enzyme binding is separated from vesicle hydrolysis using nonhydrolyzable ether lipids. Intact and tethered vesicles give rise to the same profile, indicating that direct immobilization of the vesicles does not affect hydrolysis significantly. The data fit well to a Voight-based model describing the change in film structure with time. Initial enzyme binding to intact vesicles is accompanied by a significant increase in layer thickness as well as a decrease in viscosity and shear modulus. This effect, which is less pronounced in SPBs, is probably mainly due to the accumulation of hydrolysis products in the vesicle prior to rupture of the vesicles and release of bound water, since it disappears when lysolipid is included in the vesicles prior to hydrolysis.
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Daniel E Otzen, Mikael Oliveberg (2004)  Transient formation of nano-crystalline structures during fibrillation of an Abeta-like peptide.   Protein Sci 13: 5. 1417-1421 May  
Abstract: During the first few minutes of fibrillation of a 14-residue peptide homologous to the hydrophobic C-terminal part of the Abeta-peptide, EM micrographs reveal small crystalline areas (100 to 150 nm, repeating unit 47 A) scattered in more amorphous material. On a longer time scale, these crystalline areas disappear and are replaced by tangled clusters resembling protofilaments (hours), and eventually by more regular amyloid fibrils of 60 A to 120 A diameter (days). The transient population of the crystalline areas indicates the presence of ordered substructures in the early fibrillation process, the diameter of which matches the length of the 14-mer peptide in an extended beta-strand conformation.
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Daniel E Otzen, Simona Miron, Mikael Akke, Mikael Oliveberg (2004)  Transient aggregation and stable dimerization induced by introducing an Alzheimer sequence into a water-soluble protein.   Biochemistry 43: 41. 12964-12978 Oct  
Abstract: Transient contacts between denatured polypeptide chains are likely to play an important part in the initial stages of protein aggregation and fibrillation. To analyze the nature of such contacts, we have carried out a protein engineering study of the 102-residue protein U1A, which aggregates transiently in the wild-type form during refolding from the guanidinium chloride-denatured state. We have prepared a series of mutants with increased aggregation tendencies by increasing the homology between two beta-strands of U1A and the Alzheimer peptide (beta-AP). These mutants undergo transient aggregation during refolding, as measured by concentration dependence, double-jump experiments, and binding of ANS, a probe for exposed hydrophobic patches on protein surfaces. The propensity to aggregate increases with increasing homology to beta-AP. Further, the degree of transient ANS binding correlates reasonably well with the structural parameters recently shown to play a role in the fibrillation of natively unfolded proteins. Two mutants highly prone to transient aggregation, U1A-J and U1A-G, were also studied by NMR. Secondary structural elements of the U1A-J construct (with lower beta-AP homology) are very similar to those observed in U1A-wt. In contrast, the high-homology construct U1A-G exhibits local unfolding of the C-terminal helix, which packs against the beta-sheet in the wild-type protein. U1A-G is mainly dimeric according to (15)N spin relaxation data, and the dimer interface most likely involves the beta-sheet. Our data suggest that the transient aggregate relies on specific intermolecular interactions mediated by structurally flexible regions and that contacts may be formed in different beta-strand registers.
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Jesper Søndergaard Pedersen, Gunna Christensen, Daniel Erik Otzen (2004)  Modulation of S6 fibrillation by unfolding rates and gatekeeper residues.   J Mol Biol 341: 2. 575-588 Aug  
Abstract: We present a protein engineering analysis of the fibrillation of a protein from a thermophilic organism, the 101 residue S6 from Thermus thermophilus. When agitated, S6 fibrillates at pH 2.0 in 0.4 M NaCl. Under these solvent conditions, S6 has native-like secondary structure and also unfolds and refolds cooperatively. However, its tertiary structure appears to be more plastic than at neutral pH, and some regions of the protein may be partially unstructured. At 42 degrees C, there is a lag phase of several days after which fibrillation takes place over several hours. Data from the fibrillation behaviour of a comprehensive series of single and double mutants of S6 suggests that several factors control the onset of fibrillation. Firstly, there appears to be a contiguous region of "gatekeeper" residues that inhibit fibrillation, since their truncation significantly reduces the duration of the lag phase. This region overlaps extensively with the partially unstructured region of the protein, suggesting that residues with enhanced flexibility and solvent-accessibility are important for the initiation of fibrillation. Secondly, longer lag phases correlate with faster rates of unfolding. We interpret this to mean that kinetic stability also controls fibrillation but in the sense that the quasi-native state, rather than the denatured state, is the species that participates in nucleation. This implies that fibrillation can also occur from a quasi-native state as opposed to an ensemble of highly fluctuating structures, and highlights the delicate balance between flexibility and structure required to form organized assemblies of polypeptide chains.
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Daniel E Otzen, Mikael Oliveberg (2004)  Correspondence between anomalous m- and DeltaCp-values in protein folding.   Protein Sci 13: 12. 3253-3263 Dec  
Abstract: Proteins folding according to a classical two-state system characteristically show V-shaped chevron plots. We have previously interpreted the symmetrically curved chevron plot of the protein U1A as denaturant-dependent movements in the position of the transition state ensemble (TSE). S6, a structural analog of U1A, shows a classical V-shaped chevron plot indicative of straightforward two-state kinetics, but the mutant LA30 has a curved unfolding limb, which is most consistent with TSE mobility. The kinetic m-values (derivatives of the rate constants with respect to denaturant concentration) in themselves depend on denaturant concentration. To obtain complementary information about putative mobile TSEs, we have carried out a thermodynamic analysis of the three proteins, based on data for refolding and unfolding over the range 10 degrees C to 70 degrees C. The data at all temperatures can be fitted to two-state model systems. Importantly, for all three proteins the activation heat capacities are, within error, identical to the heat capacities measured in independent experiments under equilibrium conditions. Although the equilibrium heat capacities are essentially invariant with regard to denaturant concentration, the activation heat capacities, similar to the structurally equivalent kinetic m-values, show marked denaturant dependence. Furthermore, the values of beta++ at different denaturant concentrations measured by m-values and by heat capacity values are very similar. These observations are consistent with significant transition state movements within the framework of two-state folding. The basis for TSE movement appears to be enthalpic rather than entropic, suggesting that the binding energy of denaturant-protein interactions is a major determinant of the response of energy landscape contours to changing environments.
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Jesper E Mogensen, Henrik Ipsen, Jens Holm, Daniel E Otzen (2004)  Elimination of a misfolded folding intermediate by a single point mutation.   Biochemistry 43: 12. 3357-3367 Mar  
Abstract: We present an analysis of the folding behavior of the 159-residue major birch pollen allergen Bet v 1. The protein contains a water-filled channel running through it. Consequently, the protein has a hydrophobic shell, rather than a hydrophobic core. During the folding of the protein from either the urea-, pH-, or SDS-denatured state, Bet v 1 transiently populates a partially folded intermediate state. This state appears to be misfolded, since it has to unfold at least partially to fold to the native state. The misfolded intermediate is not, however, a result of the water-filled channel in Bet v 1. The intermediate completely disappears in the mutant Tyr --> Trp120, in which the channel is still present. Tyr120 appears to behave as a "negative gatekeeper" which attenuates efficient folding. The close structural homologue, the apple allergen Mal d 1, also folds without any detectable folding intermediates. However, the position of the transition state on the reaction coordinate, which is a measure of its overall compactness relative to the denatured and native states, is reduced dramatically from ca. 0.9 in Bet v 1 to around 0.5 in Mal d 1. We suggest that this large shift in the transition state structure is partly due to different local helix propensities. Given that individual mutations can have such large effects on folding, one should not a priori expect structurally homologous proteins to fold by the same mechanism.
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2003
 
PMID 
Daniel E Otzen (2003)  Folding of DsbB in mixed micelles: a kinetic analysis of the stability of a bacterial membrane protein.   J Mol Biol 330: 4. 641-649 Jul  
Abstract: Measuring the stability of integrated membrane proteins under equilibrium conditions is hampered by the nature of the proteins' amphiphilic environment. While intrinsic fluorescence is a useful probe for structural changes in water-soluble proteins, the fluorescence of membrane proteins is sensitive to changes in lipid and detergent composition. As an attempt to overcome this problem, I present a kinetic analysis of the folding of a membrane protein, disulfide bond reducing protein B (DsbB), in a mixed micelle system consisting of varying molar ratios of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and dodecyl maltoside (DM). This analysis incorporates both folding and unfolding rates, making it possible to determine both the stability of the native state and the process by which the protein folds. Refolding and unfolding occur on the second to millisecond timescale and involve only one relaxation phase, when monitored by conventional stopped-flow. The kinetic data indicate that denaturation occurs around 0.3 mole fraction of SDS, in agreement with CD analysis and acrylamide quenching data. The rate constants have been fit to a three-state folding scheme involving the SDS-denatured state, the native state and an unfolding intermediate that accumulates only under unfolding conditions at high mole fractions of SDS. The stability of DsbB is around 4.4 kcal/mol in DM, and this is halved upon reduction of the two periplasmic disulfide bonds, and is sensitive to mutagenesis. With the caveat that kinetic data are always open to alternative interpretations, time-resolved studies in mixed micelles provide a useful approach to measure membrane protein stability over a wide range of concentrations of SDS and DM, as well as a framework for the future characterization of the DsbB folding mechanism.
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Eduardo P Melo, LuYang Chen, Joaquim M S Cabral, Peter Fojan, Steffen B Petersen, Daniel E Otzen (2003)  Trehalose favors a cutinase compact intermediate off-folding pathway.   Biochemistry 42: 24. 7611-7617 Jun  
Abstract: The folding of cutinase, an enzyme displaying lipolytic activity, has been studied in the presence of trehalose. Equilibrium unfolding data show that trehalose increases the free energy change between folded and unfolded states. Unfolding kinetics reveal the presence of an intermediate which is ca. 60% folded in terms of solvent exposure. Trehalose stabilizes this intermediate relative to the folded state. In contrast, the intermediate revealed by folding kinetics is more compact than the transition state, as shown by the positive slope observed at low denaturant concentration in the chevron plot, as well as the decrease in the observable rate constant for folding with the increase in trehalose concentration. This intermediate displays more than 50% of area buried from the solvent (relative to the native state) compared to around 40% for the transition state for folding and therefore appears to be off the folding pathway. Trehalose stabilizes and guanidine hydrochloride destabilizes this compact intermediate. Both unfolding and folding kinetics show that compact conformational states are stabilized by trehalose, in agreement with current models on the effect of compatible solutes. This effect occurs even for compact states that decelerate the folding as in the case of the intermediate revealed by folding kinetics.
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F L Aachmann, D E Otzen, K L Larsen, R Wimmer (2003)  Structural background of cyclodextrin-protein interactions.   Protein Eng 16: 12. 905-912 Dec  
Abstract: Cyclodextrins are cyclic oligosaccharides with the shape of a hollow truncated cone. Their exterior is hydrophilic and their cavity is hydrophobic, which gives cyclodextrins the ability to accommodate hydrophobic molecules/moieties in the cavity. This special molecular arrangement accounts for the variety of beneficial effects cyclodextrins have on proteins, which is widely used in pharmacological applications. We have studied the interaction between beta-cyclodextrin and four non-carbohydrate-binding model proteins: ubiquitin, chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2), S6 and insulin SerB9Asp by NMR spectroscopy at varying structural detail. We demonstrate that the interaction of beta-cyclodextrin and our model proteins takes place at specific sites on the protein surface, and that solvent accessibility of those sites is a necessary but not compelling condition for the occurrence of an interaction. If this behaviour can be generalized, it might explain the wide range of different effects of cyclodextrins on different proteins: aggregation suppression (if residues responsible for aggregation are highly solvent accessible), protection against degradation (if point of attack of a protease is sterically 'masked' by cyclodextrin), alteration of function (if residues involved in function are 'masked' by cyclodextrin). The exact effect of cyclodextrins on a given protein will always be related to the particular structure of this protein.
Notes:
2002
 
PMID 
Jesper S Pedersen, Daniel E Otzen, Peter Kristensen (2002)  Directed evolution of barnase stability using proteolytic selection.   J Mol Biol 323: 1. 115-123 Oct  
Abstract: We report the construction of a phage-displayed repertoire of mutants of the ribonuclease barnase from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens. The construction was guided by the natural variability between two closely related ribonucleases, barnase and binase from Bacillus intermedius. This repertoire was selected using a proteolytic selection method, allowing sorting of the library according to the resistance of the mutants toward proteolysis. Susceptibility toward proteolysis has been correlated with flexibility and unfolding, and is thus expected to yield mutants with increased thermal stability.Enrichment of barnase mutants with specific combinations of amino acid residues at four of the randomised positions was observed. Three of these enriched amino acid residues are present in neither barnase nor binase. For some of the mutations, the improvement in proteolytic stability does not lead to a pronounced improvement in thermodynamic stability, indicating that the factors governing the proteolytic stability in some cases may be different from those governing the thermodynamic stability, e.g. propensity to local unfolding.The results obtained add important knowledge to a novel use of phage display technology for selection of thermodynamically stable proteins. Only by carefully establishing the parameters that can be adjusted, and recognising the influence this will have on the outcome of selection, will it be possible to realise the powerful technique of proteolytic selection.
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Daniel E Otzen, Mikael Oliveberg (2002)  Conformational plasticity in folding of the split beta-alpha-beta protein S6: evidence for burst-phase disruption of the native state.   J Mol Biol 317: 4. 613-627 Apr  
Abstract: An increasing number of folding studies of two-state proteins shows that point mutations sometimes change the kinetic m-values, leading to kinks and curves in the chevron plots. The molecular origin of these changes is yet unclear although it is speculated that they are linked to structural rearrangement of the transition state or to accumulation of meta-stable intermediates. To shed more light on this issue, we present here a combined m and phi-value analysis of the split beta-alpha-beta protein S6. Wild-type S6 displays classical two-state kinetics with v-shaped chevron plot, but a majority of its mutants display distinct m-value changes or curved chevrons. We observe that this kinetic aberration of S6 is linked to mutations that are clustered in distinct regions of the native structure. The most pronounced changes, i.e. decrease in the m-value for the unfolding rate constant, are seen upon truncation of interactions between the N and C termini, whereas mutations in the centre of the hydrophobic core show smaller or even opposed effects. As a consequence, the calculated phi-values display a systematic increase upon addition of denaturant. In the case of S6, the phenomenon seems to arise from a general plasticity of the different species on the folding pathway. That is, the structure of the denatured ensemble, the transition state, and the native ground-state for unfolding seem to change upon mutation. From these changes, it is concluded that interactions spanning the centre of the hydrophobic core form early in folding, whereas the entropically disfavoured interactions linking the N and C termini consolidate very late, mainly on the down-hill-side of the folding barrier.
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Jesper E Mogensen, Reinhard Wimmer, Jørgen N Larsen, Michael D Spangfort, Daniel E Otzen (2002)  The major birch allergen, Bet v 1, shows affinity for a broad spectrum of physiological ligands.   J Biol Chem 277: 26. 23684-23692 Jun  
Abstract: Bet v 1 is a 17-kDa protein abundantly present in the pollen of the White birch tree and is the primary cause of birch pollen allergy in humans. Its three-dimensional structure is remarkable in that a solvent-accessible cavity traverses the core of the molecule. The biological function of Bet v 1 is unknown, although it is homologous to a family of pathogenesis-related proteins in plants. In this study we first show that Bet v 1 in the native state is able to bind the fluorescent probe 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid (ANS). ANS binds to Bet v 1 with 1:1 stoichiometry, and NMR data indicate that binding takes place in the cavity. Using an ANS displacement assay, we then identify a range of physiologically relevant ligands, including fatty acids, flavonoids, and cytokinins, which generally bind with low micromolar affinity. The ability of these ligands to displace ANS suggests that they also bind in the cavity, although the exact binding sites seem to vary among different ligands. The cytokinins, for example, seem to bind at a separate site close to ANS, because they increase the fluorescence of the ANS.Bet v 1 complex. Also, the fluorescent sterol dehydroergosterol binds to Bet v 1 as demonstrated by direct titrations. This study provides the first qualitative and quantitative data on the ligand binding properties of this important pollen allergen. Our findings indicate that ligand binding is important for the biological function of Bet v 1.
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PMID 
Daniel E Otzen (2002)  Protein unfolding in detergents: effect of micelle structure, ionic strength, pH, and temperature.   Biophys J 83: 4. 2219-2230 Oct  
Abstract: The 101-residue monomeric protein S6 unfolds in the anionic detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) above the critical micelle concentration, with unfolding rates varying according to two different modes. Our group has proposed that spherical micelles lead to saturation kinetics in unfolding (mode 1), while cylindrical micelles prevalent at higher SDS concentrations induce a power-law dependent increase in the unfolding rate (mode 2). Here I investigate in more detail how micellar properties affect protein unfolding. High NaCl concentrations, which induce cylindrical micelles, favor mode 2. This is consistent with our model, though other effects such as electrostatic screening cannot be discounted. Furthermore, unfolding does not occur in mode 2 in the cationic detergent LTAB, which is unable to form cylindrical micelles. A strong retardation of unfolding occurs at higher LTAB concentrations, possibly due to the formation of dead-end protein-detergent complexes. A similar, albeit much weaker, effect is seen in SDS in the absence of salt. Chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 exhibits the same modes of unfolding in SDS as S6, indicating that this type of protein unfolding is not specific for S6. The unfolding process in mode 1 has an activation barrier similar in magnitude to that in water, while the activation barrier in mode 2 is strongly concentration-dependent. The strong pH-dependence of unfolding in SDS and LTAB suggests that the rate of unfolding in anionic detergent is modulated by repulsion between detergent headgroups and anionic side chains, while cationic side chains modulate unfolding rates in cationic detergents.
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Daniel E Otzen, Mikael Oliveberg (2002)  Burst-phase expansion of native protein prior to global unfolding in SDS.   J Mol Biol 315: 5. 1231-1240 Feb  
Abstract: Although numerous studies have been directed at understanding early folding events through the characterization of folding intermediates, there are few reports on the very late folding events, i.e. on the events taking place on the native side of the folding barrier and on alternative conformations of the folded state. To shed further light on these issues, we have characterized by protein engineering the structure of an expanded but native-like intermediate that accumulates transiently in the unfolding reaction of the small protein S6 in the presence of SDS. The results show that the SDS micelles attack the native protein in the dead-time of the denaturation experiment, causing an expansion of the hydrophobic core prior to the major unfolding transition. We distinguish two forms of the unfolding intermediate that are correlated with the micellar structure. With spherical micelles, the expansion is seen mainly as a weakening of the interactions which anchor the two alpha-helices to the core of the S6 structure. With cylindrical micelles, prevalent at higher SDS concentrations, the expansion is more global and produces a species which closely resembles the transition-state structure for unfolding in GdmCl. Despite the highly weakened core, the micelle-associated intermediate displays cooperative unfolding, indicating a significant structural plasticity of the species on the native side of the folding barrier in the presence of SDS.
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PMID 
Daniel Erik Otzen, Benjamin Raerup Knudsen, Finn Aachmann, Kim Lambertsen Larsen, Reinhard Wimmer (2002)  Structural basis for cyclodextrins' suppression of human growth hormone aggregation.   Protein Sci 11: 7. 1779-1787 Jul  
Abstract: Many therapeutic proteins require storage at room temperature for extended periods of time. This can lead to aggregation and loss of function. Cyclodextrins (CDs) have been shown to function as aggregation suppressors for a wide range of proteins. Their potency is often ascribed to their affinity for aromatic amino acids, whose surface exposure would otherwise lead to protein association. However, no detailed structural studies are available. Here we investigate the interactions between human growth hormone (hGH) and different CDs at low pH. Although hGH aggregates readily at pH 2.5 in 1 M NaCl to form amorphous aggregates, the presence of 25 to 50 mM of various beta-CD derivatives is sufficient to completely avoid this. alpha- and gamma-CD are considerably less effective. Stopped-flow data on the aggregation reaction in the presence of beta-CD are analyzed according to a minimalist association model to yield an apparent hGH-beta-CD dissociation constant of approximately 6 mM. This value is very similar to that obtained by simple fluorescence-based titration of hGH with beta-CD. Nuclear magnetic resonance studies indicate that beta-CD leads to a more unfolded conformation of hGH at low pH and predominantly binds to the aromatic side-chains. This indicates that aromatic amino acids are important components of regions of residual structure that may form nuclei for aggregation.
Notes:
2001
 
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D E Otzen, M Oliveberg (2001)  A simple way to measure protein refolding rates in water.   J Mol Biol 313: 3. 479-483 Oct  
Abstract: Refolding of proteins is traditionally carried out either by diluting the denaturant-unfolded protein into buffer (GdmCl-jump) or by mixing the acid-denatured protein with strong buffer (pH-jump). The first method does not allow direct measurement of folding rates in water since the GdmCl cannot be infinitely diluted, and the second method suffers from the limitation that many proteins cannot be pH-denatured. Further, some proteins do not refold reversibly from low pH where they get trapped as aggregation prone intermediates. Here, we present an alternative approach for direct measurement of refolding rates in water, which does not rely on extrapolation. The protein is denatured in SDS, and is then mixed with alpha-cyclodextrin, which rapidly strips SDS molecules from the protein, leaving the naked unfolded protein to refold.
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M O Lindberg, J TÃ¥ngrot, D E Otzen, D A Dolgikh, A V Finkelstein, M Oliveberg (2001)  Folding of circular permutants with decreased contact order: general trend balanced by protein stability.   J Mol Biol 314: 4. 891-900 Dec  
Abstract: To examine the influence of contact order and stability on the refolding rate constant for two-state proteins, we have analysed the folding kinetics of the small beta-alpha-beta protein S6 and two of its circular permutants with relative contact orders of 0.19, 0.15 and 0.12. Data reveal a small but significant increase of the refolding rate constant (log k(f)) with decreasing contact order. At the same time, the decreased contact order is correlated to losses in global stability and alterations of the folding nucleus. When the differences in stability are accounted for by addition of Na2SO4 or by comparison of the folding kinetics at the transition mid-point, the dependence between log k(f) and contact order becomes stronger and follows the general correlation for two-state proteins. The observation emphasizes the combined action of topology and stability in controlling the rate constant of protein folding.
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2000
 
PMID 
A Cavallin, H Arozenius, K Kristensson, P Antonsson, D E Otzen, P Björk, G Forsberg (2000)  The spectral and thermodynamic properties of staphylococcal enterotoxin A, E, and variants suggest that structural modifications are important to control their function.   J Biol Chem 275: 3. 1665-1672 Jan  
Abstract: The superantigens staphylococcal enterotoxin A and E (SEA and SEE) can activate a large number of T-cells. SEA and SEE have approximately 80% sequence identity but show some differences in their biological function. Here, the two superantigens and analogues were characterized biophysically. SEE was shown to have a substantially higher thermal stability than SEA. Both SEA and SEE were thermally stabilized by 0.1 mM Zn(2+) compared with Zn(2+)-reduced conditions achieved using 1 mM EDTA or specific replacements that affect Zn(2+) coordination. The higher stability of SEE was only partly caused by the T-cell receptor (TCR) binding regions, whereas regions in the vicinity of the major histocompatibility complex class II binding sites affected the stability to a greater extent. SEE exhibited a biphasic denaturation between pH 5.0-6.5, influenced by residues in the TCR binding regions. Interestingly, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, isoelectric focusing, and circular dichroism analysis indicated that conformational changes had occurred in the SEA/E chimerical constructs relative to SEA and SEE. Thus, it is proposed that the Zn(2+) binding site is very important for the stability and potency of SEA and SEE, whereas residues in the TCR binding site have a substantial influence on the molecular conformation to control specificity and function.
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PMID 
H Umakoshi, J Persson, M Kroon, H O Johansson, D E Otzen, R Kuboi, F Tjerneld (2000)  Model process for separation based on unfolding and refolding of chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 in thermoseparating polymer two-phase systems.   J Chromatogr B Biomed Sci Appl 743: 1-2. 13-19 Jun  
Abstract: For the design of a new separation process based on unfolding and refolding of protein, the partitioning behaviour of proteins was studied in thermoseparating polymer two-phase systems with varying pH and temperature. Chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2), which unfolds reversibly in a simple two-state manner, was partitioned in an aqueous two-phase system (ATPS) composed of a random copolymer of ethylene oxide and propylene oxide (Breox) and dextran T-500. Between 25 and 50 degrees C, the partition coefficients of CI2 in Breox-dextran T-500 systems remain constant at neutral pH. However, there is a drastic increase at pH values below 1.7, 2.1, and 2.7 at 25, 40 and 50 degrees C, respectively. The partitioning behavior of CI2 was also investigated in thermoseparating water-Breox systems at 55-60 degrees C, where CI2 was partitioned to the polymer-rich phase at pH values below 2.4. These results on the CI2 partitioning can be explained by the conformational difference between the folded and the unfolded states of the protein, where the unfolded CI2 with a more hydrophobic surface is partitioned to the relatively hydrophobic Breox phase in both systems. A separation process is presented based on the partitioning behavior of unfolded and refolded CI2 by control of pH and temperature in thermoseparating polymer two-phase systems. The target protein can be recovered through (i) selective separation in Breox-dextran systems, (ii) refolding in Breox phase, and (iii) thermoseparation of primary Breox phase.
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D E Otzen, O Kristensen, M Oliveberg (2000)  Designed protein tetramer zipped together with a hydrophobic Alzheimer homology: a structural clue to amyloid assembly.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97: 18. 9907-9912 Aug  
Abstract: Limited solubility and precipitation of amyloidogenic sequences such as the Alzheimer peptide (beta-AP) are major obstacles to a molecular understanding of protein fibrillation and deposition processes. Here we have circumvented the solubility problem by stepwise engineering a beta-AP homology into a soluble scaffold, the monomeric protein S6. The S6 construct with the highest beta-AP homology crystallizes as a tetramer that is linked by the beta-AP residues forming intermolecular antiparallel beta-sheets. This construct also shows increased coil aggregation during refolding, and a 14-mer peptide encompassing the engineered sequence forms fibrils. Mutational analysis shows that intermolecular association is linked to the overall hydrophobicity of the sticky sequence and implies the existence of "structural gatekeepers" in the wild-type protein, that is, charged side chains that prevent aggregation by interrupting contiguous stretches of hydrophobic residues in the primary sequence.
Notes:
1999
 
PMID 
D E Otzen, M Oliveberg (1999)  Salt-induced detour through compact regions of the protein folding landscape.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96: 21. 11746-11751 Oct  
Abstract: In several cases, inorganic salts have been used to induce partly structured states in protein folding. But what is the nature of these states: Do they represent key stepping stones in the folding process, or are they circumstantial pitfalls in the energy landscape? Here we report that, in the case of the two-state protein S6, the salt-induced collapsed state is off the usual folding routes in the sense that it is prematurely collapsed and slows down folding by several orders of magnitude. Although this species is over-compact, it is not a dead-end trap but may fold by alternative channels to the native state.
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J E Nielsen, L Beier, D Otzen, T V Borchert, H B Frantzen, K V Andersen, A Svendsen (1999)  Electrostatics in the active site of an alpha-amylase.   Eur J Biochem 264: 3. 816-824 Sep  
Abstract: The importance of electrostatics in catalysis has been emphasized in the literature for a large number of enzymes. We examined this hypothesis for the Bacillus licheniformis alpha-amylase by constructing site-directed mutants that were predicted to change the pKa values of the catalytic residues and thus change the pH-activity profile of the enzyme. To change the pKa of the catalytic residues in the active site, we constructed mutations that altered the hydrogen bonding network, mutations that changed the solvent accessibility, and mutations that altered the net charge of the molecule. The results show that changing the hydrogen bonding network near an active site residue or changing the solvent accessibility of an active site residue will very likely result in an enzyme with drastically reduced activity. The differences in the pH-activity profiles for these mutants were modest. pH-activity profiles of mutants which change the net charge on the molecule were significantly different from the wild-type pH-activity profile. The differences were, however, difficult to correlate with the electrostatic field changes calculated. In several cases we observed that pH-activity profiles shifted in the opposite direction compared to the shift predicted from electrostatic calculations. This strongly suggests that electrostatic effects cannot be solely responsible for the pH-activity profile of the B. licheniformis alpha-amylase.
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PMID 
D E Otzen, L Christiansen, M Schülein (1999)  A comparative study of the unfolding of the endoglucanase Cel45 from Humicola insolens in denaturant and surfactant.   Protein Sci 8: 9. 1878-1887 Sep  
Abstract: Cellulases are increasingly being used for industrial purposes, particularly in washing powders, yet little is known of the factors governing the stability of proteins in detergent solutions. We present a comparative analysis of the behavior of the cellulase Cel45 from Humicola insolens in the presence of the denaturant guanidinium chloride and the anionic detergent C12-LAS. Although Cel45 unfolds in GdmCl according to a simple two-state model under equilibrium conditions, it accumulates a transient intermediate during refolding. The four disulfide bonds do not contribute detectably to the stability of the native state. Cel45 is unfolded by very low concentrations of C12-LAS (1-4 mM). An analysis of 16 mutants of Cel45 shows a very weak correlation between unfolding rates in denaturant and detergent; mutants that have the same unfolding rate in GdmCl (within a factor of 1.5) vary 1,000-fold in their unfolding rates in C12-LAS. The data support a simple model for unfolding by detergent, in which the introduction of positive charges or removal of negative charges greatly increases detergent sensitivity, while interactions with the hydrophobic detergent tail contribute to a smaller extent. This implies that different detergent-mediated unfolding pathways exist, whose accessibilities depend on individual residues. Double-mutant cycles reveal that mutations in two proximal residues lead to repulsion and a destabilization greater than the sum of the individual mutations as measured by GdmCl denaturation, but they also reduce the affinity for LAS and therefore actually stabilize the protein relative to wild-type. Ligands that interact strongly with the denatured state may therefore alter the unfolding process.
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PMID 
D E Otzen, O Kristensen, M Proctor, M Oliveberg (1999)  Structural changes in the transition state of protein folding: alternative interpretations of curved chevron plots.   Biochemistry 38: 20. 6499-6511 May  
Abstract: The interpretation of folding rates is often rationalized within the context of transition state theory. This means that the reaction rate is linked to an activation barrier, the height of which is determined by the free energy difference between a ground state (the starting point) and an apparent transition state. Changes in the folding kinetics are thus caused by effects on either the ground state, the transition state, or both. However, structural changes of the transition state are rarely discussed in connection with experimental data, and kinetic anomalies are commonly ascribed to ground state effects alone, e.g., depletion or accumulation of structural intermediates upon addition of denaturant. In this study, we present kinetic data which are best described by transition state changes. We also show that ground state effects and transition state effects are in general difficult to distinguish kinetically. The analysis is based on the structurally homologous proteins U1A and S6. Both proteins display two-state behavior, but there is a marked difference in their kinetics. S6 exhibits a classical V-shaped chevron plot (log observed rate constant vs denaturant concentration), whereas U1A's chevron plot is symmetrically curved, like an inverted bell curve. However, S6 is readily mutated to display U1A-like kinetics. The seemingly drastic effects of these mutations are readily ascribed to transition state movements where large kinetic differences result from relatively small alterations of a common free energy profile and broad activation barriers.
Notes:
 
PMID 
D E Otzen, A R Fersht (1999)  Analysis of protein-protein interactions by mutagenesis: direct versus indirect effects.   Protein Eng 12: 1. 41-45 Jan  
Abstract: Site-directed mutagenesis, including double-mutant cycles, is used routinely for studying protein-protein interactions. We now present a case analysis of chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2) and subtilisin BPN' using (i) a residue in CI2 that is known to interact directly with subtilisin (Tyr42) and (ii) two CI2 residues that do not have direct contacts with subtilisin (Arg46 and Arg48). We find that there are similar changes in binding energy on mutation of these two sets of residues. It can thus be difficult to interpret mutagenesis data in the absence of structural information.
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1998
 
DOI   
PMID 
D E Otzen, A R Fersht (1998)  Folding of circular and permuted chymotrypsin inhibitor 2: retention of the folding nucleus.   Biochemistry 37: 22. 8139-8146 Jun  
Abstract: The 64-residue chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2) folds by a two-state nucleation-condensation mechanism, whereby secondary and tertiary structure coalesce concomitantly in the transition state around Ala 16 in the helical N-cap. Permutation of the SH3-domain of alpha-spectrin apparently shifts its folding nucleus to another region of the protein, suggesting that a protein's transition state may be altered by altering the protein's connectivity. We have characterized the structure of the transition state of a circular and a permuted version of CI2 by a protein engineering study encompassing 11 mutations. Circular CI2 was obtained by the introduction of cysteines at residues 3 and 63 and linking them by disulfide bond formation. Subsequent cyanogen-bromide cleavage of the scissile bond, Met 40-Glu 41, yielded permuted CI2. Circular and permuted CI2 also fold according to a two-state mechanism. Permutation does not affect the folding rate constant, but circularization increases it 7-fold. The transition states of circular and permuted CI2 are essentially unchanged from that of wild-type CI2. Importantly, the folding nucleus around Ala16 is retained. These results complement a previous observation that the transition state for association of two CI2 fragments (residues 1-40 and 41-64, generated by CNBr cleavage) is very similar to the folding transition state of intact CI2. The similarity of rate constants for folding of wild-type and permuted CI2, and their value relative to that for the association of fragments, allows us to estimate the gain in entropy of activation on having the separate fragments linked: 18.3 cal M-1 K-1; i.e. an effective molarity of 10(4) M. The contrast between the retention of the folding nucleus on permutation of CI2 and its change for the SH3-domain of alpha-spectrin probably arises because the latter was cleaved in its folding nucleus whereas cleavage at sites other than 40-41 in CI2 is very destabilizing. Whether or not a folding nucleus can be changed probably depends on the specific protein and its permissivity to permutation.
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1997
 
DOI   
PMID 
Y J Tan, M Oliveberg, D E Otzen, A R Fersht (1997)  The rate of isomerisation of peptidyl-proline bonds as a probe for interactions in the physiological denatured state of chymotrypsin inhibitor 2.   J Mol Biol 269: 4. 611-622 Jun  
Abstract: There are four peptidyl-proline bonds in the 64-residue protein chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2), all of which are in the trans conformation in the native structure. The isomerisation of one or more of these peptidyl-proline bonds to the cis conformation in the denatured state gives rise to heterogeneity, leading to both fast and slow-folding species. The refolding of the fast-folding species, which has all trans peptidyl-proline bonds, is much faster than that of the slow-folding species, which have one or more cis peptidyl-proline bonds. In CI2, the slow-folding species can be classified into two groups by their rates of refolding, temperature-dependence, pH-dependence and [GdmCl]-dependence of the rate constants and the effect of peptidyl-prolyl isomerase on the rate constants. The replacement of Pro6 by Ala removes one of the slow refolding phases, suggesting that the cis peptidyl-Pro6 conformation is solely responsible for one of the slow-folding species. Pro6 is located in a region of the protein where non-random interactions have been found in a series of N-terminal fragments of CI2 (residues 1 to 13, 1 to 25, 1 to 28 and 1 to 40). In addition, NMR studies on a mutant fragment, (1-40)T3A, have confirmed that this non-native interaction is associated with the bulky side-chain of Trp5. The atypical rate of cis to trans isomerisation of the peptidyl-Pro bond is indicative of the presence of a similar hydrophobic cluster in the physiological denatured state of intact CI2.
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DOI   
PMID 
J L Neira, L S Itzhaki, D E Otzen, B Davis, A R Fersht (1997)  Hydrogen exchange in chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 probed by mutagenesis.   J Mol Biol 270: 1. 99-110 Jul  
Abstract: Two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy has been used to monitor hydrogen-deuterium exchange in chymotrypsin inhibitor 2. Application of two independent tests has shown that at pH 5.3 to 6.8 and 33 to 37 degrees C, exchange occurs via an EX2 limit. Comparison of the exchange rates of a number of mutants of CI2 with those of wild-type identifies the pathway of exchange, whether by local breathing, global unfolding or a mixture of the two pathways. For a large number of residues, the exchange rates were unaffected by mutations which destabilized the protein by up to 1.9 kcal mol(-1), indicating that exchange is occurring through local fluctuations of the native state. A small number of residues were found for which the mutations had the same effect on the rate constants for exchange as on the equilibrium constant for unfolding, indicating that these residues exchange by global unfolding. These are residues that have the slowest exchange rates in the wild-type protein. We see no correspondence between these residues and residues involved in the nucleation site for the folding reaction identified by protein engineering studies. Rather, the exchange behaviour of CI2 is determined by the native structure: the most protected amide protons are located in regions of hydrogen bonding, specifically the C terminus of the alpha-helix and the centre of the beta-sheet. A number of the most slowly exchanging residues are in the hydrophobic core of the protein.
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1996
 
DOI   
PMID 
V Daggett, A Li, L S Itzhaki, D E Otzen, A R Fersht (1996)  Structure of the transition state for folding of a protein derived from experiment and simulation.   J Mol Biol 257: 2. 430-440 Mar  
Abstract: Independent experimental and theoretical studies of the unfolding of barley chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2) are compared in an attempt to derive plausible three-dimensional structural models of the transition states. A very simple structure index is calculated along the sequence for the molecular dynamics-generated transition state models to facilitate comparison with the phi F values. The two are in good agreement overall (correlation coefficient = 0.87), which suggests that the theoretical models should provide a structural framework for interpretation of the phi F values. Both experiment and simulation indicate that the transition state is a distorted form of the native state in which the alpha-helix is weakened but partially intact and the beta-sheet is quite disrupted. As inferred from the phi f values and observed directly in the simulations, the unfolding of CI2 is cooperative and there is a "folding core" comprising a patch on the alpha-helix and a portion of the beta-sheet, nucleated by interactions between Ala16, Ile49 and other neighbouring residues. The protein becomes less structured radiating away from this core. Overall the data indicate that CI2 folds by a nucleation-collapse mechanism. In the absence of experimental information, we have little confidence that the molecular dynamics simulations are correct, especially when only one or a few simulations are performed. On the other hand, even though the experimentally derived phi values may reflect the extent of overall structure formation, they do not provide an actual atomic-resolution three dimensional structure of the transition state. By combining the two approaches, however, we have a framework for interpreting phi F values and can hopefully arrive at a more trustworthy model of the transition state. The process is in some ways similar to the combination of molecular dynamics and NMR data to solve the tertiary structure of proteins.
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1995
 
PMID 
D E Otzen, M Rheinnecker, A R Fersht (1995)  Structural factors contributing to the hydrophobic effect: the partly exposed hydrophobic minicore in chymotrypsin inhibitor 2.   Biochemistry 34: 40. 13051-13058 Oct  
Abstract: The structural basis for the stability of a partly solvent-exposed hydrophobic minicore, formed by the residues Leu51, Val57, and Phe69 in the reactive loop of the serine protease inhibitor chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2), was analyzed from the stability of 17 mutant proteins, in which side chain methylene groups were deleted or rearranged. The mutations destabilize the protein by 0.3-4.8 kcal/mol, an average of 0.6 kcal per removed methylene group. Double mutant cycles show significant interaction between individual pairs of side chains. There is an excellent linear correlation (r = 0.995) between the free energy of unfolding relative to wild type (delta delta GU-F) and the packing density nC (the number of methyl and methylene groups within 6 A of the removed atoms). delta delta GU-F correlates more weakly with changes in solvent-accessible surface area upon mutation. The correlation improves when the change in solvent-accessible surface are upon mutation is separated into distinct contributions from polar atoms that are able to hydrogen bond to solvent (delta AHB) and from nonpolar atoms (delta AHP). There is also a correlation, however, between packing density and changes in surface area. Elsewhere in CI2, delta delta GU-F for mutations in the buried hydrophobic core correlates best with packing density, whereas in the exposed surface of the alpha-helix, the best correlation is with change in surface area.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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DOI   
PMID 
L S Itzhaki, D E Otzen, A R Fersht (1995)  The structure of the transition state for folding of chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 analysed by protein engineering methods: evidence for a nucleation-condensation mechanism for protein folding.   J Mol Biol 254: 2. 260-288 Nov  
Abstract: The 64-residue protein chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2) is a single module of structure. It folds and unfolds as a single co-operative unit by simple two-state kinetics via a single rate determining transition state. This transition state has been characterized at the level of individual residues by analysis of the rates and equilibria of folding of some 100 mutants strategically distributed at 45 sites throughout the protein. Only one residue, a helical residue (Ala16) buried in the hydrophobic core, has its full native interaction energy in the transition state. The only region of structure which is well developed in the transition state is the alpha-helix (residues 12 to 24). But, the interactions within it are weakened, especially at the C-terminal region. The rest of the protein has varying degrees of weakly formed structure. Thus, secondary and tertiary interactions appear to form concurrently. These data, reinforced by studies on the structures of peptide fragments, fit a "nucleation-condensation" model in which the overall structure condenses around an element of structure, the nucleus, that itself consolidates during the condensation. The high energy transition state is composed of the whole of the molecule making a variety of weak interactions, the nucleus being those residues that make the strongest interactions. The nucleus here is part of the alpha-helix and some distant residues in the sequence with which it makes contacts. The remainder of the protein has to be sufficiently ordered that it provides the necessary interactions to stabilize the nucleus. The nucleus is only weakly formed in the denatured state but develops in the transition state. The onrush of stability as the nucleus consolidates its local and long range interactions is so rapid that it is not yet fully formed in the transition state. The formation of the nucleus is thus coupled with the condensation. These results are consistent with a recent simulation of the folding of a computer model protein on a lattice which is found to proceed by a nucleation-growth mechanism. We suggest that the mechanism of folding of CI2 may be a common theme in protein folding whereby fundamental folding units of larger proteins, which are modelled by the folding of CI2, form by nucleation-condensation events and coalesce, perhaps in a hierarchical manner.
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DOI   
PMID 
G de de Gay, J Ruiz-Sanz, J L Neira, F J Corrales, D E Otzen, A G Ladurner, A R Fersht (1995)  Conformational pathway of the polypeptide chain of chymotrypsin inhibitor-2 growing from its N terminus in vitro. Parallels with the protein folding pathway.   J Mol Biol 254: 5. 968-979 Dec  
Abstract: We have obtained a series of fragments growing from the N terminus of the protein chymotrypsin inhibitor-2 (C12) in order to study the development of structure on elongation of the polypeptide in solution. We present an extensive biophysical characterization of ten fragments using different conformational probes. Small fragments up to residue 40 of the 64-residue protein are disordered. Fragment (1-40) has non-native local hydrophobic clusters, but nevertheless does not bind 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulphonate (ANS). Hydrophobic regions in longer fragments become gradually more capable of binding ANS as the chain grows to completion, with a tendency to form native structures. Major changes in secondary structure and accessibility to hydrophobic sites occur in parallel, between (1-40) and (1-53), together with changes in hydrodynamic volume and flexibility. NMR studies of (1-53), the first fragment displaying tertiary interactions, show that a subcore is fully formed and the alpha-helix (residues 12 to 24) is of fluctuating structure. Fragments (1-53) and (1-60) share many properties with molten globule-like structures, with varying degrees or order. Fluorescence properties of the native fold are gradually recovered from fragments (1-60) to full-length C12, together with a decrease in hydrophobic exposure. A small degree of co-operativity of formation of structure appears when residue 60 is added, gradually increasing as residue 62 is added, but a full two-state co-operative transition appears only on addition of Arg62 and Val63. We believe this is the result of correct side-chain packing of the hydrophobic core, capping the major elements of secondary structure in C12 at this late stage, which is probed by the complete recovery of the fluorescence of the unique Trp5. The structures that develop as the polypeptide chain increases in length parallel the structural features present in the nucleus for the folding of intact protein, which develops in the transition state. The folding nucleus consists of much of the helix and the interactions made by Ala16 in the helix with residues in the core, especially with Leu49 and Ile57, with the rest of the structure being formed only very weakly in the transition state.
Notes:
 
PMID 
L S Itzhaki, D E Otzen, A R Fersht (1995)  Nature and consequences of GroEL-protein interactions.   Biochemistry 34: 44. 14581-14587 Nov  
Abstract: The importance of chaperonin-protein interactions has been investigated by analyzing the refolding of the barley chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 in the presence of GroEL. The chaperonin retards the rate of refolding of wild type and 32 representative point mutants. The retardation of the rate drops to a finite level at saturating concentrations of GroEL, being lowered by a factor of 3-100, depending on the mutation. It is seen qualitatively that truncation of large hydrophobic side chains to smaller side chains weakens binding. Analysis of the magnitude of the rates of retardation shows further that hydrophobic and positively charged side chains tend to interact favorably with GroEL whereas negatively charged side chains tend to repel. There is an inverse correlation between the strength of hydrophobic interactions and the rate constant for refolding of the GroEL-complexed protein: the better the binding, the slower the folding. This shows directly that hydrophobic (and other favorable) interactions between the chaperonin and substrate are weakened during the refolding process and implies that unfolding can be catalyzed by the gain of such interactions.
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PMID 
A Matouschek, D E Otzen, L S Itzhaki, S E Jackson, A R Fersht (1995)  Movement of the position of the transition state in protein folding.   Biochemistry 34: 41. 13656-13662 Oct  
Abstract: Hammond behavior, in which two neighboring states move closer to each other along the reaction coordinate as the energy difference between them becomes smaller, has previously been observed for the transition state of unfolding of barnase. Here, we report Hammond behavior for the small protein chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2), which folds and unfolds via a single rate-determining transition state and simple two-state kinetics. Mutants have been generated along the entire sequence of the protein and the kinetics of folding and unfolding measured as a function of concentration of denaturant. The transition state was found to move progressively closer to the folded state on destabilization of the protein by mutation. Different regions of CI2 all show a similar sensitivity to changes in the energy of the transition state. This is in contrast to the behavior of barnase on mutation for which the position of the transition state for its unfolding is sensitive to mutation in some regions, especially in its major alpha-helix, but not in others. The transition state for the folding and unfolding of CI2 resembles an expanded version of the folded state and is formed in a concerted manner, in contrast to that for barnase, in which some regions of structure are fully formed and others fully unfolded. The reason for the general sensitivity of the position of the transition state of CI2 to mutation is presumably the relatively uniform degree of structure formation in the transition state and the concerted nature of its formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID 
D E Otzen, A R Fersht (1995)  Side-chain determinants of beta-sheet stability.   Biochemistry 34: 17. 5718-5724 May  
Abstract: beta-Sheet propensities of different amino acids depend on the context of both secondary and tertiary structure. In an attempt to establish general empirical relationships that determine this context dependence, we have determined the free energy of unfolding of a series of mutants at six positions in the beta-sheet of chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI2). We have generated the series Val-->Ala-->Gly and Val<==>Thr at five positions, as well as the side-chain deletion Ile-->Val at residue 49 and Ala-->Gly at residue 77. In the series Val-->Ala-->Gly, the ranking order in terms of stability is Val > Ala > Gly at all positions. However, the change in free energy on deletion of methylene groups varies greatly. When Val and Thr are interchanged, the wild-type residue is always the more stable, but by a different amount at each position. We have attempted to rationalize the data by relating it to changes in solvent-accessible surface area, packing density, and statistically derived pseudo-energy functions that depend on phi, psi angles. There is no significant correlation of the energies with any of the variables except with the pseudo-energy function, but the deviations from these values are large. We conclude that thermodynamic scales for beta-sheet propensity are currently of insufficient precision for general design purposes, although they may be useful in special cases.
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PMID 
J Ruiz-Sanz, G de de Gay, D E Otzen, A R Fersht (1995)  Protein fragments as models for events in protein folding pathways: protein engineering analysis of the association of two complementary fragments of the barley chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 (CI-2).   Biochemistry 34: 5. 1695-1701 Feb  
Abstract: Two fragments of chymotrypsin inhibitor-2, CI-2(20-59) and CI-2(60-83), derived from cyanogen bromide cleavage at Met-59, associate to give a native-like structure. We analyze the kinetics and equilibria of association of mutant fragments derived from cleaving mutant proteins at the same methionine residue. The changes in free energy of association have been measured both from isothermal studies of the binding of fragments and from thermal denaturation of the complexes. In general, there is a good correlation between the changes on mutation of the free energy of association of fragments and the changes in free energy of folding of the uncleaved parent protein. The notable exceptions are for residues in regions of the fragments that form nonnative hydrophobic clusters in the isolated fragments; mutation of the hydrophobic residues involved in these clusters decreases the equilibrium constant for formation of the noncovalent complex less than it does the equilibrium constant for folding of intact protein. The dissociated fragments must be destabilized by mutation of those hydrophobic residues, but to a lesser extent than is the complex itself. These clusters are thus less important energetically in the denatured state of the intact protein. The second-order rate constants for the major phase of association change with mutation, similar results being obtained from fluorescence measurements of the regain of tertiary structure and from circular dichroism measurements of the regain of secondary structure. The rate constants for association correlate well, in general, with the rate constants of refolding of the respective uncleaved proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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1994
 
PMID 
A R Fersht, L S Itzhaki, N F elMasry, J M Matthews, D E Otzen (1994)  Single versus parallel pathways of protein folding and fractional formation of structure in the transition state.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 91: 22. 10426-10429 Oct  
Abstract: Protein engineering and kinetic experiments indicate that some regions of proteins have partially formed structure in the transition state for protein folding. A crucial question is whether there is a genuine single transition state that has interactions that are weakened in those regions or there are parallel pathways involving many transition states, some with the interactions fully formed and others with the structural elements fully unfolded. We describe a kinetic test to distinguish between these possibilities. The kinetics rule out those mechanisms that involve a mixture of fully formed or fully unfolded structures for regions of the barley chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 and barnase, and so those regions are genuinely only partially folded in the transition state. The implications for modeling of protein folding pathways are discussed.
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PMID 
D E Otzen, L S Itzhaki, N F elMasry, S E Jackson, A R Fersht (1994)  Structure of the transition state for the folding/unfolding of the barley chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 and its implications for mechanisms of protein folding.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 91: 22. 10422-10425 Oct  
Abstract: The equilibrium and kinetics of folding of the single-domain protein chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 conform to the simple two-state model. The structure of the rate-determining transition state has been mapped out at the resolution of individual side chains by using the protein engineering method on 74 mutants that have been constructed at 37 of the 64 residues. The structure contains no elements of secondary structure that are fully formed. The majority of interactions are weakened by > 50% in the transition state, although most regions do have some very weak structure. The structure of the transition state appears to be an expanded form of the native state in which secondary and tertiary elements have been partly formed concurrently. This is consistent with a "global collapse" model of folding rather than a framework model in which folding is initiated from fully preformed local secondary structural elements. This may be a general feature for the folding of proteins lacking a folding intermediate and is perhaps representative of the early stages of folding for multidomain or multimodule proteins. The major transition state for the folding of barnase, for example, has some fully formed secondary and tertiary structural elements in the major transition state, and barnase appears to form by a framework process. However, the fully formed framework may be preceded by a global collapse, and a unified folding scheme is presented.
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PMID 
D E Otzen, J Barciszewski, B F Clark (1994)  Dual hydrolytic role for Pb(II) ions.   Biochimie 76: 1. 15-21  
Abstract: RNA phosphodiester bonds can be cleaved by metal ions, of which Pb2+ is one of the most effective. It can cleave both generally and site-specifically, depending on the substrate and the conditions. In addition, metal ions are also known to cleave ester bonds between amino acid and the 3'-end of transfer RNA. Here we report that in aminoacylated transfer RNA, Pb2+ ions cleave internucleotide bonds in the 3'-end of tRNA and also cleaves the bond between tRNA and its amino-acid, attached at the 3'-end via an ester bond to the terminal ribose in aminoacyl tRNA. The two reactions proceed at different rates. The rate of deacylation is significantly faster than the rate of cleavage of phosphodiester bonds, with a pH-optimum of 7. This dual hydrolytic role is not seen for other metal ions examined, namely Zn(II), Cd(II) and Mn(II). The rate of the two kinds of hydrolyses by Pb2+ ions is compared with that of other metal-ions. The mechanism of cleavage is investigated further by modification of the 3'-end of tRNA.
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1993
 
PMID 
J Barciszewski, S I Rattan, G E Siboska, D E Otzen, B F Clark (1993)  Reduction in the amount of 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine in the DNA of SV40-transformed human fibroblasts as compared with normal cells in culture.   FEBS Lett 318: 2. 186-188 Mar  
Abstract: DNA damage due to oxidative free radicals is considered to be a major cause of ageing and age-related diseases including cancer. Of more than 20 modifications formed in DNA by the action of hydroxyl radicals, 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (oh8dG) is potentially highly mutagenic and is known to occur most frequently. Using HPLC combined with electrochemical (HPLC/EC) detection of oh8dG, fivefold higher levels of oh8dG are detected in the DNA of cultured normal human skin fibroblasts as compared with SV40-transformed human fibroblasts MRC-5V2. In comparison, the levels of oh8dG were similar in the growth medium of both types of cells. Applications of this method range from studies on the genomic stability and instability of normal and cancerous cells to the clinical and laboratory testing of toxic substances and drugs.
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PMID 
D E Otzen, J Barciszewski, B F Clark (1993)  Altered lead(II)-cleavage pattern of free Phe-tRNAPhe and Phe-tRNAPhe in ternary complex with EF-Tu:GTP.   Biochem Mol Biol Int 31: 1. 95-103 Sep  
Abstract: Pb2+ ions in sub-millimolar concentrations are known to cleave internucleotide bonds of phenylalanine-specific transfer RNA (tRNAPhe) from Saccharomyces. cerevisiae specifically between nucleotides D17 and G18 in the D-loop, with additional minor cleavages after D16 and G15. This makes lead(II) a sensitive structural probe for correct folding of tRNAPhe. In the present paper we use Pb2+ ions as a functional probe to determine whether this part of tRNA is protected by the Escherichia coli elongation factor EF-Tu in the ternary complex formed between Phe-tRNAPhe and EF-Tu.GTP. Our results show that for tRNA in complex with EF-Tu:GTP, the phosphodiester bond after D17 is cleaved, yet the phosphodiester bonds after D16 and G15 are not. To our knowledge, this is the first time that Pb2+ ions, bound at a specific site in tRNA, have been used both to investigate the correct folding of tRNA in complex, and to footprint a functional complex with components whose individual structures are known.
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1992
 
PMID 
J Barciszewski, D Otzen, S I Rattan, B F Clark (1992)  Specific incorporation of kinetin into eukaryotic and prokaryotic transfer ribonucleic acid molecules.   Biochem Int 28: 5. 805-811 Dec  
Abstract: We show that kinetin, a non-natural product with strong cytokinin activity, is incorporated into prokaryotic and eukaryotic tRNAs in the exchange reaction catalysed by a putative tRNA-kinetin transglycosylase. We also show that kinetin is specifically incorporated into E. coli tRNA(Tyr) and most probably at position 37. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a nucleic acid base exchange reaction occurring at this position.
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