Navon Ami, Ittah Varda, Scheraga Harold A, Haas Elisha
Faculty of Life Sciences, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel 52900.
Biochemistry. 2002 Dec 3;41(48):14225-31. doi: 10.1021/bi020506p.
With steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence energy-transfer measurements, we determined the distributions of intramolecular distances in nine mutants to study the conformations of wild-type ribonuclease A in the reduced state under folding conditions. Although far-UV-CD measurements show no evidence for a secondary-structure transition, temperature- and GdnHCl-induced changes in intramolecular distance distributions in the reduced state revealed evidence for long-range subdomain structures in the denatured protein. These poorly defined structures, reflected here by wide distributions corresponding to a wide range of energies, form during refolding in a complex sequence of multiple subdomain transitions. A more well-defined structure emerges only when this structural framework, which directs the successive steps in the folding process, matures and is reinforced by stronger interactions such as disulfide bonds.