Pauwels_2012_PLoS.One_7_e36999

Reference

Title : Decoding the folding of Burkholderia glumae lipase: folding intermediates en route to kinetic stability - Pauwels_2012_PLoS.One_7_e36999
Author(s) : Pauwels K , Sanchez del Pino MM , Feller G , Van Gelder P
Ref : PLoS ONE , 7 :e36999 , 2012
Abstract :

The lipase produced by Burkholderia glumae folds spontaneously into an inactive near-native state and requires a periplasmic chaperone to reach its final active and secretion-competent fold. The B. glumae lipase-specific foldase (Lif) is classified as a member of the steric-chaperone family of which the propeptides of alpha-lytic protease and subtilisin are the best known representatives. Steric chaperones play a key role in conferring kinetic stability to proteins. However, until present there was no solid experimental evidence that Lif-dependent lipases are kinetically trapped enzymes. By combining thermal denaturation studies with proteolytic resistance experiments and the description of distinct folding intermediates, we demonstrate that the native lipase has a kinetically stable conformation. We show that a newly discovered molten globule-like conformation has distinct properties that clearly differ from those of the near-native intermediate state. The folding fingerprint of Lif-dependent lipases is put in the context of the protease-prodomain system and the comparison reveals clear differences that render the lipase-Lif systems unique. Limited proteolysis unveils structural differences between the near-native intermediate and the native conformation and sets the stage to shed light onto the nature of the kinetic barrier.

PubMedSearch : Pauwels_2012_PLoS.One_7_e36999
PubMedID: 22615867
Gene_locus related to this paper: burgl-lipas

Related information

Gene_locus burgl-lipas

Citations formats

Pauwels K, Sanchez del Pino MM, Feller G, Van Gelder P (2012)
Decoding the folding of Burkholderia glumae lipase: folding intermediates en route to kinetic stability
PLoS ONE 7 :e36999

Pauwels K, Sanchez del Pino MM, Feller G, Van Gelder P (2012)
PLoS ONE 7 :e36999