Torrent_2001_Protein.Sci_10_725

Reference

Title : Pressure versus temperature unfolding of ribonuclease A: an FTIR spectroscopic characterization of 10 variants at the carboxy-terminal site - Torrent_2001_Protein.Sci_10_725
Author(s) : Torrent J , Rubens P , Ribo M , Heremans K , Vilanova M
Ref : Protein Science , 10 :725 , 2001
Abstract :

FTIR spectroscopy was used to characterize and compare the temperature- and pressure-induced unfolding of ribonuclease A and a set of its variants engineered in a hydrophobic region of the C-terminal part of the molecule postulated as a CFIS. The results show for all the ribonucleases investigated, a cooperative, two-state, reversible unfolding transition using both pressure and temperature. The relative stabilities, among the different sites and different variants at the same site, monitored either through the changes in the position of the maximum of the amide I' band and the tyrosine band, or the maximum of the band assigned to the beta-sheet structure, corroborate the results of a previous study using fourth-derivative UV absorbance spectroscopy. In addition, variants at position 108 are the most critical for ribonuclease structure and stability. The V108G variant seems to present a greater conformational flexibility than the other variants. The pressure- and temperature-denaturated states of all the ribonucleases characterized retained some secondary structure. However, their spectral maxima were centered at different wavenumbers, which suggests that pressure- and temperature-denaturated states do not have the same structural characteristics. Nevertheless, there was close correlation between the pressure and temperature midpoint transition values for the whole series of protein variants, which indicated a common tendency of stability toward pressure and heat.

PubMedSearch : Torrent_2001_Protein.Sci_10_725
PubMedID: 11274463

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Citations formats

Torrent J, Rubens P, Ribo M, Heremans K, Vilanova M (2001)
Pressure versus temperature unfolding of ribonuclease A: an FTIR spectroscopic characterization of 10 variants at the carboxy-terminal site
Protein Science 10 :725

Torrent J, Rubens P, Ribo M, Heremans K, Vilanova M (2001)
Protein Science 10 :725