Experimental Data Snapshot
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(2000) Biochemistry 39: 8655-8665
To clarify the role of amino acid residues at turns in the conformational stability and folding of a globular protein, six mutant human lysozymes deleted or substituted at turn structures were investigated by calorimetry, GuHCl denaturation experiments, and X-ray crystal analysis. The thermodynamic properties of the mutant and wild-type human lysozymes were compared and discussed on the basis of their three-dimensional structures. For the deletion mutants, Delta47-48 and Delta101, the deleted residues are in turns on the surface and are absent in human alpha-lactalbumin, which is homologous to human lysozyme in amino acid sequence and tertiary structure. The stability of both mutants would be expected to increase due to a decrease in conformational entropy in the denatured state; however, both proteins were destabilized. The destabilizations were mainly caused by the disappearance of intramolecular hydrogen bonds. Each part deleted was recovered by the turn region like the alpha-lactalbumin structure, but there were differences in the main-chain conformation of the turn between each deletion mutant and alpha-lactalbumin even if the loop length was the same. For the point mutants, R50G, Q58G, H78G, and G37Q, the main-chain conformations of these substitution residues located in turns adopt a left-handed helical region in the wild-type structure. It is thought that the left-handed non-Gly residue has unfavorable conformational energy compared to the left-handed Gly residue. Q58G was stabilized, but the others had little effect on the stability. The structural analysis revealed that the turns could rearrange the main-chain conformation to accommodate the left-handed non-Gly residues. The present results indicate that turn structures are able to change their main-chain conformations, depending upon the side-chain features of amino acid residues on the turns. Furthermore, stopped-flow GuHCl denaturation experiments on the six mutants were performed. The effects of mutations on unfolding-refolding kinetics were significantly different among the mutant proteins. The deletion/substitutions in turns located in the alpha-domain of human lysozyme affected the refolding rate, indicating the contribution of turn structures to the folding of a globular protein.
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Biological assembly 1 assigned by authors.
Macromolecule Content 
Entity ID: 1 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Molecule | Chains | Sequence Length | Organism | Details | Image |
| LYSOZYME C | 128 | Homo sapiens | Mutation(s): 0  EC: 3.2.1.17 | ![]() | |
UniProt & NIH Common Fund Data Resources | |||||
Find proteins for P61626 (Homo sapiens) Explore P61626  Go to UniProtKB:  P61626 | |||||
PHAROS:  P61626 GTEx:  ENSG00000090382  | |||||
Entity Groups  | |||||
| Sequence Clusters | 30% Identity50% Identity70% Identity90% Identity95% Identity100% Identity | ||||
| UniProt Group | P61626 | ||||
Sequence AnnotationsExpand | |||||
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| Ligands 1 Unique | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ID | Chains | Name / Formula / InChI Key | 2D Diagram | 3D Interactions | |
| NA Query on NA Download Ideal Coordinates CCD File  | B [auth A] | SODIUM ION Na FKNQFGJONOIPTF-UHFFFAOYSA-N | |||
| Length ( Å ) | Angle ( ˚ ) |
|---|---|
| a = 45.8 | α = 90 |
| b = 59.27 | β = 90 |
| c = 38.91 | γ = 90 |
| Software Name | Purpose |
|---|---|
| PROCESS | data collection |
| PROCESS | data reduction |
| AMoRE | phasing |
| X-PLOR | refinement |
| PROCESS | data scaling |
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