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United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Department of Cell Biology and Biochemistry, Frederick, Maryland 21702, USA
Reprint requests to: John Carra, United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Department of Cell Biology and Biochemistry, 1425 Porter Street, Frederick, MD 21702, USA; e-mail: john. carra{at}det.amedd.army.mil; fax: (301) 619-2348.
(RECEIVED May 28, 2004; FINAL REVISION June 29, 2004; ACCEPTED July 2, 2004)
| Abstract |
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Keywords: protein folding; stability; ricin; vaccine
Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are at http://www.proteinscience.org/cgi/doi/10.1110/ps.04897904.
| Introduction |
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Recent threats of biological warfare and bioterrorism, combined with the widespread availability of castor beans, highlight the need for a safe and effective vaccine against ricin poisoning. However, earlier efforts to develop a recombinant protein vaccine encountered difficulties with limitations in solubility and stability.
Argent et al. (2000) reported that recombinant ricin A chain (rRTA) produced in bacteria is relatively unstable compared with a typical globular protein, adopting at 45°C a monomeric, partially unfolded, or "molten globule," state. These investigators proposed that such an intermediate exists in vivo during translocation of rRTA from the ER to the cytosol through cellular machinery for the recognition, export, and degradation of misfolded polypeptides. They also presented evidence that it refolds to an active form on contact with ribosomes in the cytosol.
Nontoxic derivatives of rRTA (267 aa) can elicit protective immunity, but the low thermostability of rRTA and its tendency to undergo partial unfolding are undesirable characteristics for a vaccine (Brandau et al. 2003). Several rRTA variants with point mutations in the active site have been investigated (Schlossman et al. 1989; Ready et al. 1991; Kim and Robertus 1992; Kim et al. 1992; Day et al. 1996), but the folding stabilities of these polypeptides have either not been reported or are equal to or less than that of rRTA itself. Additional substitution of residues implicated in vascular leak syndrome, observed when RTA is used in high doses as part of an immunotoxin, has been proposed (Smallshaw et al. 2002, 2003).
To overcome the limitations of rRTA, single-domain versions were designed by Olson et al. (2003, 2004) to be more stable and soluble antigenic platforms (Fig. 1
). rRTA 1198 lacks the C-terminal domain (residues 199 to 267), whereas rRTA 133/44198 has an external loop region (residues 3443) deleted. Residues 95110 (Lebeda and Olson 1999) and 161175 (Castelleti et al. 2004) comprising major neutralizing B-cell epitopes were retained in both constructs. Removing the C-terminal domain abolished the toxic N-glycosidase activity of RTA, whereas deleting residues 3443 further reduced its size and eliminated a potentially disordered region. Intramuscular vaccination with rRTA 133/44198 or 1198 effectively protected mice challenged by injection or aerosol with ricin toxin (Olson et al. 2004).
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| Results |
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-helix and
-sheet predicted assuming conservation in the mutants from the known structure of rRTA (Mlsna et al. 1993). rRTA contains 32%
-helix and 16%
-sheet, whereas removing residues 3443 and 199267 from the same structure would yield 36%
-helix and 17%
-sheet. The small increase in
-helicity in the mutants versus rRTA was reflected in slightly greater ellipticities at 222 nm, whereas their Y-intercept at a shorter wavelength is consistent with a minor reduction in disordered regions. The large deletions in these derivatives did not, however, appear to induce major structural changes in the remainder of the protein.
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Figure 3
shows deuterated Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) spectra in the amide I' region for rRTA versus rRTA 133/44198. The shapes of these two spectra and that of rRTA 1198 (data not shown) are very similar, in agreement with the conclusion from CD spectra that secondary structure content was conserved in these derivatives. Spectral deconvolution was not attempted due to uncertainties in this approach and the observation that overall secondary structure content was little altered by the deletions. Conservation of structure is an important consideration for correct presentation of neutralizing epitopes, which for residues 95110 was predicted to be conformational (Lebeda and Olson 1999).
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G of folding. Therefore, we use the temperature of onset of denaturation, defined as the point of 5% signal change, as a marker of relative thermal stability. An increase in
-sheet content in the heat-denatured state was observed by FTIR and CD for all the proteins (data not shown).
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Sensitivity to proteolysis
Treating rRTA, rRTA 1198, and rRTA 133/44198 with thermolysin revealed differences in their sensitivities to digestion. Previously, rRTA was highly resistant to proteinase K digestion and able to survive treatment with 1 mg/mL protease (Walker et al. 1996). We found that rRTA was also quite resistant to thermolysin cleavage (Fig. 5
). Some digestion of rRTA did occur after 60 min of incubation with thermolysin, but approximately half of the protein was intact. In contrast, all but a small fraction of rRTA 1198 was digested to small fragments after 10 min. The increased susceptibility of rRTA 1198 to thermolysin digestion was most likely due to exposure and disordering of loop residues 3444 as a result of truncation of the C-terminal domain. In the structure of rRTA (Fig. 1
), the C-terminal domain is packed against this loop, protecting it from a cleavage event rapidly followed by further degradation.
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-helix of the N-terminal domain. The short loop preceding this helix makes contacts to residues 251253 in the C-terminal domain of RTA. Truncation at residue 198 in the mutant protein may have increased chain mobility and proteolytic sensitivity near residue 183, although we found this sensitivity did not present a problem for protein expression, isolation, and storage.
Unfolding intermediate of rRTA not present in the mutants
The origin of the increased thermostabilities of the rRTA derivatives was explored by examining more closely their mechanisms of denaturation. The proteins were unfolded by titration with guanidine-HCl, whereas circular dichroism (CD) and fluorescence emission were measured simultaneously. Relative changes in ellipticity at 225 nm, and intrinsic fluorescence emission are plotted as functions of denaturant concentration in Figure 6A
. Also plotted is fluorescence from the hydrophobic dye 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS), added to the protein solution in a separate experiment.
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Figure 6B
presents the variation in fluorescence emission spectra of rRTA as a function of guanidine-HCl concentration. The spectra can be seen to shift from a maximum at 328 nm to one near 303 nm, reflecting the quenching of tryptophan and subsequent increase of tyrosine fluorescence as denaturation proceeds in two phases.
Judging from these data, denaturation of rRTA is at least a three-state process, including an intermediate state in which Trp 211 is exposed to solvent. Residual structure remains in this form, providing an accessible hydrophobic region able to bind ANS, with a resultant increase in the fluorescence of the dye. With further increase of guanidine-HCl concentration from 1.8 M, this residual structure was disrupted, yielding a small increase in tyrosine fluorescence and a decrease in ANS emission.
By using the same probes, we also followed the denaturation of rRTA 133/44198 and rRTA 1198 (Fig. 6C,D
). These derivatives have the 12 tyrosines of the RTA N-terminal domain and no tryptophan. Their tyrosine fluorescence increased 1.75-fold with denaturation, which can be attributed to a relief from quenching interactions present in the native state. The change in tyrosine emission paralleled the change in CD, whereas fluorescence from ANS decreased gradually up to 2 M guanidine-HCl, but changed little through the region of protein unfolding. Neither probe gave clear signs of an intermediate state as with wild-type rRTA.
The magnitude of the normalized increase in fluorescence emission at 303 nm in the second phase of denaturation of rRTA was not as great as for the two mutant derivatives, due to the significant contribution of tryptophan 211 in rRTA in the folded state. ANS did bind to the folded states of both rRTA 133/44198 and rRTA 1198, but the decrease in ANS fluorescence observed at low guanidine-HCl concentrations suggests that this was due to electrostatic interactions of the sulfate group of ANS, which weakened as ionic strength increased. ANS also binds weakly to the native state of wild-type rRTA (Houston 1980).
Unfolding of rRTA 133/44198 followed by CD had a denaturant midpoint concentration of 2.5 M guanidine-HCl (Table 1
), whereas the midpoint of rRTA by this criterion was only 1.6 M, in fair agreement with the results of Bushueva and Tonevitsky (1987). rRTA 133/44198 was therefore significantly more stable to solvent denaturation than was rRTA, in accord with results from thermal melting. rRTA 1198 was slightly less stable than 133/44198, with a midpoint of 2.3 M guanidine-HCl. Similar results to those for rRTA were obtained for plant-derived nRTA, with a midpoint denaturation concentration of 1.4 M guanidine-HCl.
Because the irreversibility of rRTA unfolding (Argent et al. 2000) precludes detailed thermodynamic analysis, we do not present
G values for folding. Nevertheless, the CD and fluorescence data for rRTA 133/44198 or rRTA 1198 (Fig. 6C
) could be well fit simultaneously by nonlinear regression to a two-state model of unfolding for each protein (Pace et al. 1989). The CD and fluorescence signal changes were clearly coincident, following the same transition between states. Coincidence of two such observations is a commonly accepted criterion for the existence of only two states, the native and denatured, without the presence of an intermediate. Unfolding data for rRTA in contrast could not be fit to a two-state model, due to the more complex nature of the process.
| Discussion |
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The absence for rRTA 133/44198 and rRTA 1198 of a partially unfolded intermediate strongly suggests that the smaller C-terminal domain, deleted in these mutants, is relatively unstable and responsible for the early unfolding transition of rRTA. This point is also supported by comparison of unfolding transitions monitored by multiple spectroscopic probes, including a single tryptophan residue present in the C-terminal domain.
The cause of the increases in denaturational temperature and guanidine-HCl midpoint when the C-terminal domain of rRTA was truncated may be understood in terms of a change in mechanism of unfolding from multistate to two-state. The large active-site cleft in the structure of rRTA apparently limited interdomain contacts and resulted in partial independence of the C-terminal domain as a folding unit (Fig. 7
). Transformation to a partially folded intermediate upon early unfolding of this domain effectively limited the stability of wild-type rRTA but not the two mutant derivatives studied.
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Removing the loop residues 3344 and the C-terminal domain both added to the apparent stabilities of the truncated proteins, with the latter making the larger contribution. Reducing the size of surface loops is expected, in general, to stabilize proteins by decreasing the entropic cost of loop closure during folding (Chan and Dill 1988).
We found that glycosylation of RTA in its natural form did not significantly alter the secondary structure or denaturational temperature of the protein, but decreased aggregation during thermal melting and extended incubation experiments. Glycosylation has been shown to reduce the aggregation of other denatured proteins (Wang et al. 1996). Preventing association of misfolded states in vivo may be a major benefit of this modification.
Implications for vaccine design
In general, the native state of a protein is only as stable as the energetic difference to the nearest accessible nonnative state. "Negative design" (Hecht et al. 1990) against nonna-tive states is therefore an important consideration for protein stability. In this case, a more thermostable protein was made by removing C-terminal domain residues that contributed to the adoption of a partly folded state. Deleting the C-terminal domain also eliminated toxic enzymatic activity by removing residues crucial to binding of substrate (Olson and Cuff 1999). A further improvement to the 1198 construct was made by removing a newly protease-sensitive exposed loop, residues 3443. The design of more stable proteins for use as antigens is in some ways a simpler problem than the design of thermostable enzymes because maintenance of enzymatic activity is unnecessary or, in the case of toxins, undesirable.
The toxicological and immunological properties (Olson et al. 2004) of the rRTA derivatives 133/44198 and 1198, along with the biophysical characteristics described here, indicate that they represent a significant advance over other ricin vaccine candidates. The engineered rRTA derivatives have high solubility and exist in solution as discrete monomers, unlike chemically modified RTA toxoids, which display pronounced aggregation (Thorpe et al. 1985). Their increased thermostability also confers advantages for vaccine production, formulation, and storage (Brandau et al. 2003).
Currently, a major goal in vaccine design is to create vaccines that do not require continuous refrigeration (the "cold chain"), or lyophilization with stabilizing agents. Our results suggest that the reduction of protein subunits to a minimum essential domain containing a neutralizing epitope should be tested on other antigens as a strategy to approach that goal.
| Materials and methods |
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Dynamic light scattering
Dynamic laser light-scattering measurements were made with a Dyna-Pro MS800 instrument (Protein Solutions, Inc.) on samples at 25°C in PBS buffer. The Dynamics software package provided with the instrument was used to calculate hydrodynamic molecular weights from a standard curve for small globular proteins. Results for rRTA and its derivatives indicated monodispersity. Protein solutions at 0.8 mg/mL were passed through a 0.02-µM filter to remove particulates before use.
CD and fluorescence
Far-UV CD spectra on protein solutions at 0.2 mg/mL, in PBS buffer at 5°C, were taken with a Jasco-810 spectropolarimeter and 1-mm pathlength cell. Four scans were averaged, and data were not smoothed. Near-UV measurements were done at 0.8 mg/mL, 1-cm pathlength and 5°C. In thermal melts, heating was done at 1 K/min with a Peltier temperature controller. In guanidine-HCl titration experiments, CD and fluorescence emission data were collected by using an automatic titrator and a fluorescence detector at a right angle to the excitation beam. Guanidine-HCl was mixed into a 0.2 mg/mL protein solution at 25°C in PBS buffer. Concentrations of guanidine-HCl solutions were measured with a refractometer (Nozaki 1972). Intrinsic fluorescence emission spectra were collected for each injection with excitation at 280 and 295 nm, as well as the ellipticity at 225 nm. The excitation bandwidth was 3 nm. In ANS-containing experiments, fluorescence emission at 480 nm from 50 µm ANS was measured with excitation at 380 nm.
Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy
FTIR measurements were obtained with 20µg of protein by using horizontal attenuated total reflectance on a thermally controlled 45° angle ZnSe crystal with 25 internal reflections (PikeTech) at 25°C. Samples were deuterated to reduce absorbance in the amide I region from liquid water. Hydrogen/deuterium exchange was accomplished by flowing D2O-saturated N2 gas over a sample dried down on the crystal (Goormaghtigh et al. 1999); 250 scans were taken at 2 cm1 resolution. The contribution of residual water vapor to the spectra was manually subtracted.
Protein stability versus incubation at 37°C
Protein samples at 0.2 mg/mL in PBS were incubated at 37°C for up to 106 h, in the presence of 2 mM DTT to prevent disulfide-bond formation. The solution was then centrifuged to pellet insoluble material. Protein concentration in the soluble fraction was measured by Bio-Rad protein dye assay.
Protease digestion
rRTA, rRTA 1198, or rRTA 133/44198 at 0.2 mg/mL in PBS was incubated at 37°C with 0.02 mg/mL thermolysin. Aliquots of protein were removed after 10, 30, and 60 min of incubation. The reactions were quenched with 10 mM EDTA and samples analyzed by SDS-PAGE.
| Acknowledgments |
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The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 USC section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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