Proline inhibits aggregation during protein refolding
Authors
Abstract
The in vitro refolding of hen egg‐white lysozyme is studied in the presence of various osmolytes. Proline is found to prevent aggregation during protein refolding. However, other osmolytes used in this study fail to exhibit a similar property. Experimental evidence suggests that proline inhibits protein aggregation by binding to folding intermediate(s) and trapping the folding intermediate(s) into enzymatically inactive, “aggregation‐insensitive” state(s). However, elimination of proline from the refolded protein mixture results in significant recovery of the bacteriolytic activity. At higher concentrations (>1.5 M), proline is shown to form loose, higher‐order molecular aggregate(s). The supramolecular assembly of proline is found to possess an amphipathic character. Formation of higher‐order aggregates is believed to be crucial for proline to function as a protein folding aid. In addition to its role in osmoregulation under water stress conditions, the results of this study hint at the possibility of proline behaving as a protein folding chaperone.
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1110/ps.9.2.344 About DOI



