1gb3 Citations

Role of surface hydrophobic residues in the conformational stability of human lysozyme at three different positions.

Biochemistry 39 14448-56 (2000)
Related entries: 1gay, 1gb0, 1gb2, 1gb5, 1gb6, 1gb7, 1gb8, 1gb9, 1gbo, 1gbw, 1gbx, 1gby, 1gbz

Cited: 22 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 11087397

Abstract

To evaluate the contribution of the amino acid residues on the surface of a protein to its stability, a series of hydrophobic mutant human lysozymes (Val to Gly, Ala, Leu, Ile, Met, and Phe) modified at three different positions on the surface, which are located in the alpha-helix (Val 110), the beta-sheet (Val 2), and the loop (Val 74), were constructed. Their thermodynamic parameters of denaturation and crystal structures were examined by calorimetry and by X-ray crystallography at 100 K, respectively. Differences in the denaturation Gibbs energy change between the wild-type and the hydrophobic mutant proteins ranged from 4.6 to -9.6 kJ/mol, 2.7 to -1.5 kJ/mol, and 3.6 to -0.2 kJ/mol at positions 2, 74, and 110, respectively. The identical substitution at different positions and different substitutions at the same position resulted in different degrees of stabilization. Changes in the stability of the mutant proteins could be evaluated by a unique equation considering the conformational changes due to the substitutions [Funahashi et al. (1999) Protein Eng. 12, 841-850]. For this calculation, secondary structural propensities were newly considered. However, some mutant proteins were not adapted to the equation. The hydration structures around the mutation sites of the exceptional mutant proteins were affected due to the substitutions. The stability changes in the exceptional mutant proteins could be explained by the formation or destruction of the hydration structures. These results suggest that the hydration structure mediated via hydrogen bonds covering the protein surface plays an important role in the conformational stability of the protein.

Articles citing this publication (22)

  1. Characterization of disease-associated single amino acid polymorphisms in terms of sequence and structure properties. Ferrer-Costa C, Orozco M, de la Cruz X. J Mol Biol 315 771-786 (2002)
  2. Determinants in nuclease specificity of Ape1 and Ape2, human homologues of Escherichia coli exonuclease III. Hadi MZ, Ginalski K, Nguyen LH, Wilson DM. J Mol Biol 316 853-866 (2002)
  3. Unspecific hydrophobic stabilization of folding transition states. Viguera AR, Vega C, Serrano L. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99 5349-5354 (2002)
  4. Buried water molecules contribute to the conformational stability of a protein. Takano K, Yamagata Y, Yutani K. Protein Eng 16 5-9 (2003)
  5. Are the parameters of various stabilization factors estimated from mutant human lysozymes compatible with other proteins? Funahashi J, Takano K, Yutani K. Protein Eng 14 127-134 (2001)
  6. Impact of the native-state stability of human lysozyme variants on protein secretion by Pichia pastoris. Kumita JR, Johnson RJ, Alcocer MJ, Dumoulin M, Holmqvist F, McCammon MG, Robinson CV, Archer DB, Dobson CM. FEBS J 273 711-720 (2006)
  7. Amino acid sequence autocorrelation vectors and Bayesian-regularized genetic neural networks for modeling protein conformational stability: gene V protein mutants. Fernández L, Caballero J, Abreu JI, Fernández M. Proteins 67 834-852 (2007)
  8. The critical role of N- and C-terminal contact in protein stability and folding of a family 10 xylanase under extreme conditions. Bhardwaj A, Leelavathi S, Mazumdar-Leighton S, Ghosh A, Ramakumar S, Reddy VS. PLoS One 5 e11347 (2010)
  9. Improving catalytic efficiency of endo-β-1, 4-xylanase from Geobacillus stearothermophilus by directed evolution and H179 saturation mutagenesis. Wang Y, Feng S, Zhan T, Huang Z, Wu G, Liu Z. J Biotechnol 168 341-347 (2013)
  10. Comparison of starch hydrolysis activity and thermal stability of two Bacillus licheniformis alpha-amylases and insights into engineering alpha-amylase variants active under acidic conditions. Lee S, Oneda H, Minoda M, Tanaka A, Inouye K. J Biochem 139 997-1005 (2006)
  11. Structural characterization of CspZ, a complement regulator factor H and FHL-1 binding protein from Borrelia burgdorferi. Brangulis K, Petrovskis I, Kazaks A, Bogans J, Otikovs M, Jaudzems K, Ranka R, Tars K. FEBS J 281 2613-2622 (2014)
  12. The critical role of partially exposed N-terminal valine residue in stabilizing GH10 xylanase from Bacillus sp.NG-27 under poly-extreme conditions. Bhardwaj A, Leelavathi S, Mazumdar-Leighton S, Ghosh A, Ramakumar S, Reddy VS. PLoS One 3 e3063 (2008)
  13. Recombination of thermo-alkalistable, high xylooligosaccharides producing endo-xylanase from Thermobifida fusca and expression in Pichia pastoris. Wang Q, Du W, Weng XY, Liu MQ, Wang JK, Liu JX. Appl Biochem Biotechnol 175 1318-1329 (2015)
  14. Role of amino acid residues in left-handed helical conformation for the conformational stability of a protein. Takano K, Yamagata Y, Yutani K. Proteins 45 274-280 (2001)
  15. Identification of catalysis, substrate, and coenzyme binding sites and improvement catalytic efficiency of formate dehydrogenase from Candida boidinii. Jiang W, Lin P, Yang R, Fang B. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 100 8425-8437 (2016)
  16. Isothermal acid-titration calorimetry for evaluating the pH dependence of protein stability. Nakamura S, Kidokoro S. Biophys Chem 109 229-249 (2004)
  17. Molecular dynamics study of naturally existing cavity couplings in proteins. Barbany M, Meyer T, Hospital A, Faustino I, D'Abramo M, Morata J, Orozco M, de la Cruz X. PLoS One 10 e0119978 (2015)
  18. Small exterior hydrophobic cluster contributes to conformational stability and steroid binding in ketosteroid isomerase from Pseudomonas putida biotype B. Yun YS, Nam GH, Kim YG, Oh BH, Choi KY. FEBS J 272 1999-2011 (2005)
  19. Biophysical Spandrels form a Hot-Spot for Kosmotropic Mutations in Bacteriophage Thermal Adaptation. Whittington AC, Rokyta DR. J Mol Evol 87 27-36 (2019)
  20. The effect of urea on aqueous hydrophobic contact-pair interactions. Shpiruk TA, Khajehpour M. Phys Chem Chem Phys 15 213-222 (2013)
  21. Enhancing catalytic activity of a hybrid xylanase through single substitution of Leu to Pro near the active site. Wang Q, Zhao LL, Sun JY, Liu JX, Weng XY. World J Microbiol Biotechnol 28 929-935 (2012)
  22. Use of molecular dynamics data in biochemistry courses: An amphipathy scale to determine protein α-helix transmembrane segments. Mazzé FM, Fuzo CA, Degrève L, Ciancaglini P. Biochem Mol Biol Educ 36 129-134 (2008)


Related citations provided by authors (1)