Rehaber V, Jaenicke R
Institut für Biophysik and Physikalische Biochemie, Universität Regensburg, Federal Republic of Germany.
J Biol Chem. 1992 Jun 5;267(16):10999-1006.
The molecular basis of thermal stability of globular proteins is a highly significant yet unsolved problem. The most promising approach to its solution is the investigation of the structure-function relationship of homologous enzymes from mesophilic and thermophilic sources. In this context, D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase has been the most extensively studied model system. In the present study, the most thermostable homolog isolated so far is described with special emphasis on the stability of the enzyme under varying solvent conditions. D-Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from the hyperthermophilic eubacterium Thermotoga maritima is an intrinsically thermostable enzyme with a thermal transition temperature around 110 degrees C. The amino acid sequence, electrophoresis, and sedimentation analysis prove the enzyme to be a homotetramer with a gross structure similar to its mesophilic counterparts. The enzyme in the absence and in the presence of its coenzyme, NAD+, exhibits no drastic structural differences except for a 3% change in sedimentation velocity reflecting slight alterations in the quaternary structure of the enzyme. At low temperature, in the absence of denaturants, neither "cold denaturation" nor subunit dissociation are detectable. Guanidinium chloride and pH-dependent deactivation precede the decrease in fluorescence emission and ellipticity, suggesting a complex denaturation mechanism. An up to 3-fold activation of the enzyme at low guanidinium concentration may be interpreted in terms of a compensation of the tight packing of the thermophilic enzyme at low temperature. Under destabilizing conditions, e.g. moderate concentrations of chaotropic agents, low temperature favors denaturation. The effect becomes important in reconstitution experiments after preceding guanidinium denaturation; the reactivation yield at low temperature drops to zero, whereas between 35 and 80 degrees C reactivation exceeds 80%. Shifting the temperature from approximately 0 degrees C to greater than or equal to 30 degrees C releases a trapped tetrameric intermediate in a fast reaction. Concentration-dependent reactivation experiments prove renaturation of the enzyme to involve consecutive folding and association steps. Reconstitution at room temperature yields the native protein, in spite of the fact that the temperature of the processes in vitro and in vivo differ by more than 60 degrees C.
球状蛋白质热稳定性的分子基础是一个极为重要但尚未解决的问题。解决该问题最有前景的方法是研究来自嗜温菌和嗜热菌的同源酶的结构 - 功能关系。在此背景下,3 - 磷酸甘油醛脱氢酶一直是研究最为广泛的模型系统。在本研究中,描述了迄今为止分离出的最耐热的同源物,并特别强调了该酶在不同溶剂条件下的稳定性。来自嗜热真细菌嗜热栖热菌的3 - 磷酸甘油醛脱氢酶是一种内在耐热的酶,其热转变温度约为110℃。氨基酸序列、电泳和沉降分析证明该酶是一种同四聚体,其总体结构与其嗜温对应物相似。该酶在不存在和存在其辅酶NAD⁺的情况下,除沉降速度有3%的变化反映出酶四级结构的轻微改变外,未表现出明显的结构差异。在低温下,在不存在变性剂的情况下,既未检测到“冷变性”也未检测到亚基解离。在荧光发射和椭圆率降低之前,存在氯化胍和pH依赖性失活,这表明存在复杂的变性机制。在低胍浓度下酶活性高达3倍的激活可解释为对嗜热酶在低温下紧密堆积的补偿。在不稳定条件下,例如中等浓度的离液剂,低温有利于变性。在先前胍变性后的重组实验中,这种效应变得很重要;低温下的再激活产率降至零,而在35至80℃之间再激活率超过80%。将温度从约0℃转变为大于或等于30℃会在快速反应中释放出被困的四聚体中间体。浓度依赖性再激活实验证明该酶的复性涉及连续的折叠和缔合步骤。尽管体外和体内过程的温度相差超过60℃,但在室温下重组仍可产生天然蛋白质。