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The effect of specific proline residues on the kinetic stability of the triosephosphate isomerases of two trypanosomes
Author(s) -
GuzmánLuna Valeria,
Quezada Andrea G.,
DíazSalazar A. Jessica,
Cabrera Nallely,
PérezMontfort Ruy,
Costas Miguel
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
proteins: structure, function, and bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.699
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1097-0134
pISSN - 0887-3585
DOI - 10.1002/prot.25231
Subject(s) - triosephosphate isomerase , proline , chemistry , isomerase , enzyme kinetics , differential scanning calorimetry , mutant , kinetics , trypanosoma brucei , kinetic energy , crystallography , affinities , stereochemistry , enzyme , active site , biochemistry , amino acid , thermodynamics , physics , quantum mechanics , gene
The effect of specific residues on the kinetic stability of two closely related triosephosphate isomerases (from Trypanosoma cruzi , TcTIM and Trypanosoma brucei , TbTIM) has been studied. Based on a comparison of their β‐turn occurrence, we engineered two chimerical enzymes where their super secondary β‐loop‐α motifs 2 ((βα) 2 ) were swapped. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) experiments showed that the (βα) 2 motif of TcTIM inserted into TbTIM (2Tc) increases the kinetic stability. On the other hand, the presence of the (βα) 2 motif of TbTIM inserted into TcTIM (2Tb) gave a chimerical protein difficult to purify in soluble form and with a significantly reduced kinetic stability. The comparison of the contact maps of the (βα) 2 of TbTIM and TcTIM showed differences in the contact pattern of residues 43 and 49. In TcTIM these residues are prolines, located at the N‐terminal of loop‐2 and the C‐terminal of α‐helix‐2. Twelve mutants were engineered involving residues 43 and 49 to study the effect over the unfolding activation energy barrier ( E A ). A systematic analysis of DSC data showed a large decrease on the E A of TcTIM (Δ E A ranging from 468 to 678 kJ/mol) when the single and double proline mutations are present. The relevance of Pro43 to the kinetic stability is also revealed by mutation S43P, which increased the free energy of the transition state of TbTIM by 17.7 kJ/mol. Overall, the results indicate that protein kinetic stability can be severely affected by punctual mutations, disturbing the complex network of interactions that, in concerted action, determine protein stability. Proteins 2017; 85:571–579. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.