Fuller Erika, Green Brad R, Catlin Phil, Buczek Olga, Nielsen Jacob S, Olivera Baldomero M, Bulaj Grzegorz
Cognetix Inc, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
FEBS J. 2005 Apr;272(7):1727-38. doi: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2005.04602.x.
Conotoxins are short, disulfide-rich peptide neurotoxins produced in the venom of predatory marine cone snails. It is generally accepted that an estimated 100,000 unique conotoxins fall into only a handful of structural groups, based on their disulfide bridging frameworks. This unique molecular diversity poses a protein folding problem of relationships between hypervariability of amino acid sequences and mechanism(s) of oxidative folding. In this study, we present a comparative analysis of the folding properties of four conotoxins sharing an identical pattern of cysteine residues forming three disulfide bridges, but otherwise differing significantly in their primary amino acid sequence. Oxidative folding properties of M-superfamily conotoxins GIIIA, PIIIA, SmIIIA and RIIIK varied with respect to kinetics and thermodynamics. Based on rates for establishing the steady-state distribution of the folding species, two distinct folding mechanisms could be distinguished: first, rapid-collapse folding characterized by very fast, but low-yield accumulation of the correctly folded form; and second, slow-rearrangement folding resulting in higher accumulation of the properly folded form via the reshuffling of disulfide bonds within folding intermediates. Effects of changing the folding conditions indicated that the rapid-collapse and the slow-rearrangement mechanisms were mainly determined by either repulsive electrostatic or productive noncovalent interactions, respectively. The differences in folding kinetics for these two mechanisms were minimized in the presence of protein disulfide isomerase. Taken together, folding properties of conotoxins from the M-superfamily presented in this work and from the O-superfamily published previously suggest that conotoxin sequence diversity is also reflected in their folding properties, and that sequence information rather than a cysteine pattern determines the in vitro folding mechanisms of conotoxins.
芋螺毒素是由掠食性海洋芋螺毒液产生的、富含二硫键的短肽神经毒素。基于其二硫键连接框架,一般认为估计有100,000种独特的芋螺毒素仅属于少数几个结构组。这种独特的分子多样性带来了一个蛋白质折叠问题,即氨基酸序列的高度变异性与氧化折叠机制之间的关系。在本研究中,我们对四种芋螺毒素的折叠特性进行了比较分析,这四种芋螺毒素具有相同的形成三个二硫键的半胱氨酸残基模式,但它们的一级氨基酸序列有显著差异。M超家族芋螺毒素GIIIA、PIIIA、SmIIIA和RIIIK的氧化折叠特性在动力学和热力学方面有所不同。根据建立折叠物种稳态分布的速率,可以区分出两种不同的折叠机制:第一,快速折叠,其特征是正确折叠形式的积累非常快但产量低;第二,缓慢重排折叠,通过折叠中间体中二硫键的重新排列导致正确折叠形式的积累更高。改变折叠条件的影响表明,快速折叠和缓慢重排机制分别主要由排斥性静电相互作用或有效的非共价相互作用决定。在蛋白质二硫键异构酶存在的情况下,这两种机制的折叠动力学差异最小化。综上所述,本研究中呈现的M超家族芋螺毒素以及先前发表的O超家族芋螺毒素的折叠特性表明,芋螺毒素序列多样性也反映在它们的折叠特性中,并且序列信息而非半胱氨酸模式决定了芋螺毒素的体外折叠机制。