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Probing the influence on folding behavior of structurally conserved core residues in P. aeruginosa apo‐azurin

Authors

K. Cecilia Engman, Anders Sandberg, Johan Leckner, B. Göran Karlsson

Abstract

The effects on folding kinetics and equilibrium stability of core mutations in the apo‐mutant C112S of azurin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa were studied. A number of conserved residues within the cupredoxin family were recognized by sequential alignment as constituting a common hydrophobic core: I7, F15, L33, W48, F110, L50, V95, and V31. Of these, I7, V31, L33, and L50 were mutated for the purpose of obtaining information on the transition state and a potential folding nucleus. In addition, residue V5 in the immediate vicinity of the common core, as well as T52, separate from the core, were mutated as controls. All mutants exhibited a nonlinear dependence of activation free energy of folding on denaturant concentration, although the refolding kinetics of the V31A/C112S mutant indicated that the V31A mutation destabilizes the transition state enough to allow folding via a parallel transition state ensemble. Φ‐values could be calculated for three of the six mutants, V31A/C112S, L33A/C112S, and L50A/C112S, and the fractional values of 0.63, 0.33, and 0.50 (respectively) obtained at 0.5 M GdmCl suggest that these residues are important for stabilizing the transition state. Furthermore, a linear dependence of ln kobsH2O on ΔGU−NH2O of the core mutations and the putative involvement of ground‐state effects suggest the presence of native‐like residual interactions in the denatured state that bias this ensemble toward a folding‐competent state.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1110/ps.04849004 About DOI

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