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The molten globule state of α‐lactalbumin
Author(s) -
Kuwajima Kunihiro
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.10.1.8566530
Subject(s) - molten globule , groel , chemistry , protein folding , lactalbumin , native state , crystallography , equilibrium unfolding , circular dichroism , alpha lactalbumin , protein secondary structure , folding (dsp implementation) , biophysics , biochemistry , escherichia coli , biology , electrical engineering , gene , engineering
The molten globule stale of a‐lactal‐ bumin Is the best‐characterized folding intermediate of globular proteins and has been studied intensively by various spectroscopic and physicochemical techniques, including stopped‐flow CD and fluorescence spectroscopies, a hydrogen‐exchange technique, 1 H‐ NMR spectroscopy, disulfide‐exchange chemistry, site‐directed mutagenesis, and calorimetric techniques. This review summarizes recent studies. Major findings about the structure of the molten globule state are: 1 ) It is highly heterogeneous, having a highly structured a‐helical domain with the β‐sheet domain being significantly unfolded; and 2) it is not a nonspecific, collapsed polypeptide but already has a native‐like tertiary fold. These structural characteristics are essential to fully understand the thermodynamic properties of the molten globule state, which are described in connection with a recently proposed computational approach to predict the structure of the molten globule state of a protein. Mutant proteins in which the stability of the molten globule state was changed were constructed. Studies of the equilibrium unfolding and kinetic refolding of the mutant proteins will provide further insight into the molten globule state as a folding intermediate. In spite of an initial expectation that the structure recognized by an Escherichia coli chaperone, GroEL, is the molten globule, the interaction of GroEL with a‐lactalbumin in the molten globule state is much weaker than the interaction with more unfolded states of α‐lactalbumin, a disulfide‐reduced form, and disulfide rearranged species.—Kuwajima, K. The molten globule state of α‐lactalbu‐ min . FASEB J. 10, 102‐109 (1996)