Sadat Anwar, Tiwari Satyam, Mapa Koyeli
Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research, CSIR-HRDC, Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh 201002, India.
CSIR-Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology, Mathura Road, New Delhi 110025, India.
Bio Protoc. 2021 Jul 20;11(14):e4099. doi: 10.21769/BioProtoc.4099.
Understanding the folding pathway of any protein is of utmost importance for deciphering the folding problems under adverse conditions. We can obtain important information about the folding pathway by monitoring the folding of any protein from its unfolded state. It is usually very difficult to monitor the folding process in real time as the process is generally very fast, and we need a suitable read out. In this protocol, we have solved this issue by using a protein that is non-fluorescent in its unfolded state but fluoresces in its native state after folding. The kinetics of refolding can be monitored by following the increase in fluorescence in real time. Previously, this was generally achieved by either monitoring a protein's enzymatic activity or measuring the tryptophan fluorescence, where the signal output depends on well-described enzymatic activity or the frequency of tryptophan residues present in the proteins, respectively. Here, we describe a simple and real-time assay to monitor the refolding of sGFP, a recently described slow-folding mutant of yeGFP (yeast enhanced GFP). We unfold this protein using chemical denaturant and refold in a suitable buffer, monitoring the increase in fluorescence over time. GFP is fluorescent only when correctly folded; thus, using this technique, we can measure the true rate of protein refolding by following the increase in fluorescence over time. Therefore, sGFP can be used as an ideal model to study the protein folding process. Accordingly, the effects of different conditions and molecules on the protein folding pathway can be efficiently studied using sGFP as a model protein. Graphical abstract: Native sGFP is unfolded by chemical denaturation using 6 M GuHCl at 25°C for 1 hour and then refolded in refolding buffer by 100-fold dilution.
了解任何蛋白质的折叠途径对于破解不利条件下的折叠问题至关重要。通过监测任何蛋白质从其未折叠状态开始的折叠过程,我们可以获得有关折叠途径的重要信息。由于该过程通常非常快,实时监测折叠过程通常非常困难,我们需要一种合适的读出方法。在本方案中,我们通过使用一种在未折叠状态下无荧光但折叠后在天然状态下发荧光的蛋白质解决了这个问题。可以通过实时跟踪荧光增加来监测重折叠动力学。以前,这通常是通过监测蛋白质的酶活性或测量色氨酸荧光来实现的,其中信号输出分别取决于充分描述的酶活性或蛋白质中存在的色氨酸残基的频率。在这里,我们描述了一种简单的实时测定方法,用于监测sGFP的重折叠,sGFP是最近描述的yeGFP(酵母增强型绿色荧光蛋白)的慢折叠突变体。我们使用化学变性剂使这种蛋白质展开,并在合适的缓冲液中重折叠,监测荧光随时间的增加。绿色荧光蛋白只有在正确折叠时才会发荧光;因此,使用这种技术,我们可以通过跟踪荧光随时间的增加来测量蛋白质重折叠的真实速率。因此,sGFP可以用作研究蛋白质折叠过程的理想模型。相应地,使用sGFP作为模型蛋白,可以有效地研究不同条件和分子对蛋白质折叠途径的影响。图形摘要:天然sGFP在25°C下用6 M盐酸胍化学变性1小时展开,然后在重折叠缓冲液中通过100倍稀释重折叠。