Long-Range Interactions Within a Nonnative Protein

Judith Klein‐Seetharaman(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Maki Oikawa(Kyushu University), Shaun B. Grimshaw(University of Oxford), Julia Wirmer(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Elke Duchardt(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Tadashi Ueda(Kyushu University), Taiji Imoto(Kyushu University), Lorna J. Smith(University of Oxford), Christopher M. Dobson(University of Oxford), Harald Schwalbe(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Science
March 1, 2002
Cited by 626

Abstract

Protein folding and unfolding are coupled to a range of biological phenomena, from the regulation of cellular activity to the onset of neurodegenerative diseases. Defining the nature of the conformations sampled in nonnative proteins is crucial for understanding the origins of such phenomena. We have used a combination of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and site-directed mutagenesis to study unfolded states of the protein lysozyme. Extensive clusters of hydrophobic structure exist within the wild-type protein even under strongly denaturing conditions. These clusters involve distinct regions of the sequence but are all disrupted by a single point mutation that replaced residue Trp62 with Gly located at the interface of the two major structural domains in the native state. Thus, nativelike structure in the denatured protein is stabilized by the involvement of Trp62 in nonnative and long-range interactions.


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