Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.26.9 (ribonuclease)
6,589 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The different partially folded states of the capsid protein that appear in the disassembly pathway of cowpea severe mosaic virus (CPSMV) were investigated by examining the effects of hydrostatic pressure, sub-zero temperatures and urea. The conformational states of the coat protein were analyzed by their intrinsic fluorescence, binding of bis(8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate) (bis-ANS) and susceptibility to trypsin digestion. CPSMV could be disassembled by pressure at 2.5 kbar. Intrinsic fluorescence and hydrodynamic measurements showed that pressure-induced dissociation was completely reversible. Virus pressurization in the presence of ribonuclease revealed that viral RNA was not exposed, since it was not digested by the enzyme, suggesting the maintenance of protein-nucleic acid interactions under pressure. When the temperature was decreased to -10 degrees C under pressure, CPSMV disassembly became an irreversible process and in this condition, viral RNA was completely digested by ribonuclease. These results suggest a relationship between protein-RNA interactions and CPSMV assembly. Bis-ANS binding and trypsin digestion of coat proteins revealed that they assume a different conformation when they are denatured by low temperatures under pressure or than when they are denatured by urea at atmospheric pressure. The results indicate that the coat proteins can exist in at least four states: (1) The native conformation in the virus capsid; (2) bound to RNA when the virus is dissociated by pressure at room temperature, assuming a conformation that retains the information for reassembly; (3) free subunits in a molten-globule conformation when the virus is dissociated by low temperature under pressure; and (4) free subunits completely unfolded by high concentrations of urea.
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PMID:Partially folded states of the capsid protein of cowpea severe mosaic virus in the disassembly pathway. 934 52

Chimeric immunotoxins that combine antigen recognition domains of antibodies and cytotoxic RNases have attracted much attention in recent years as potential targeted agents for cancer immunotherapy. In an attempt to obtain a structurally minimized immunofusion for folding/stability studies, we constructed the chimeric protein VL-barnase. The chimera comprises a small cytotoxic enzyme barnase, ribonuclease from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens, fused to the C-terminus of the light chain variable domain (VL) of the anti-human ferritin monoclonal antibody F11. While the individual VL domain was expressed in Escherichia coli as insoluble protein packed into inclusion bodies, its fusion to barnase resulted in a significant ( approximately 70%) fraction of soluble protein, with only a minor insoluble fraction ( approximately 30%) packed into inclusion bodies. The in vivo solubilizing effect of barnase was also observed in vitro and suggests a chaperone-like role that barnase exerted with regard to the N-terminal VL domain. Cytoplasmic VL-barnase was analyzed for structural and functional properties. The dimeric state of the chimeric protein was demonstrated by size-exclusion chromatography, thus indicating that fusion to barnase did not abrogate the intrinsic dimerization propensity of the VL domain. Ferritin-binding affinity and specificity in terms of constants of association with isoferritins were identical for the isolated VL domain and its barnase fusion, and RNase activity remained unchanged after the fusion. Intrinsic fluorescence spectra showed a fully compact tertiary structure of the fusion protein. However, significantly altered pH stability of the fusion protein versus individual VL and barnase was shown by the pH-induced changes in both intrinsic fluorescence and binding of ANS. Together, the results indicate that VL-barnase retained the antigen-binding affinity, specificity and RNase activity pertinent to the two individual constituents, and that their fusion into a single-chain chimeric protein resulted in an altered tertiary fold and pH stability.
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PMID:Fusion of the antiferritin antibody VL domain to barnase results in enhanced solubility and altered pH stability. 1498 41