کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
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5371391 | 1388818 | 2011 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
MfpA from Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a founding member of the pentapeptide repeat class of proteins (PRP) that is believed to confer bacterial resistance to the drug fluoroquinolone by mimicking the size, shape and surface charge of duplex DNA. We show that phenylalanine side chain stacking stabilizes the N-terminus of MfpA's pentapeptide thus extending the DNA mimicry analogy. The Lumry-Eyring model was applied to multiple spectral measures of MfpA denaturation revealing that the MfpA dimer dissociates to monomers which undergo a structural transition that leads to aggregation. MfpA retains high secondary and tertiary structure content under denaturing conditions. Dimerization stabilizes MfpA's pentapeptide repeat fold. The high Arrhenius activation energy of the barrier to aggregate formation rationalizes its stability. The mechanism of MfpA denaturation and refolding is a 'double funnel' energy landscape where the 'native' and 'aggregate' funnels are separated by the high barrier that is not overcome during in vitro refolding.
Research highlights⺠MfpA denaturation can be modeled as a 'double funnel' energy landscape. ⺠During denaturation, MfpA dimer dissociation is followed by a structural transition that precedes aggregation into a non-native structure. ⺠The energy barrier to aggregation rationalizes the observed kinetic trap in MfpA unfolding. ⺠Stacking of the phenylalanine side chain stabilizes the pentapeptide repeat fold of native MfpA.
Journal: Biophysical Chemistry - Volume 159, Issue 1, November 2011, Pages 33-40