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Query: UNIPROT:P62988 (
Ubiquitin
)
4,326
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ubiquitin
adopts a non-native folded structure in 60%
methanol
solution at low pH. Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (2D NMR) was used to measure the hydrogen-exchange rates of backbone amide protons of ubiquitin in both native and
methanol
forms, and to characterize the structure of ubiquitin in the
methanol
state. Protection factors (the ratios of experimentally determined exchange rates to the rates calculated for an unfolded polypeptide) for protons in the native form of ubiquitin range from less than 10 to greater than 10(5). Most of the protons that are protected from exchange are located in regions of hydrogen-bonded secondary structure. The most strongly protected backbone amide protons are those of residues comprising the hydrophobic core. Hydrogen exchange from ubiquitin in
methanol
solution was too rapid to measure directly by 2D NMR, so a labeling scheme was employed, in which exchange with solvent occurred while the protein was in
methanol
solution. Exchange was quenched by dilution with aqueous buffer after the desired labeling time, and proton occupancies were measured by 1H NMR of the native form of the protein. Protection factors for protons in the
methanol
form of ubiquitin range from 2.6 to 42, with all protected protons located in hydrogen-bonded structure in the native form. Again, the most strongly protected protons are those of residues in the hydrophobic core. Comparison of the patterns of the hydrogen-exchange rates in the native and
methanol
forms indicates that almost all of the native secondary structure persists in the
methanol
form, but that it is almost uniformly destabilized by 4-6 kcal/mol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hydrogen exchange in native and alcohol forms of ubiquitin. 133 57
Human ubiquitin is a 76-residue protein that serves as a protein degradation signal when conjugated to another protein.
Ubiquitin
has been shown to exist in at least three states: native (N-state), unfolded (U-state), and, when dissolved in 60%
methanol
:40% water at pH 2.0, partially folded (A-state). If the A-state represents an intermediate in the folding pathway of ubiquitin, comparison of the known structure of the N-state with that of the A-state may lead to an understanding of the folding pathway. Insights into the structural basis for ubiquitin's role in protein degradation may also be obtained. To this end we determined the secondary structure of the A-state using heteronuclear three-dimensional NMR spectroscopy of uniformly 15N-enriched ubiquitin. Sequence-specific 1H and 15N resonance assignments were made for more than 90% of the residues in the A-state. The assignments were made by concerted analysis of three-dimensional 1H-15N NOESY-HMQC and TOCSY-HMQC data sets. Because of 1H chemical shift degeneracies, the increased resolution provided by the 15N dimension was critical. Analysis of short- and long-range NOEs indicated that only the first two strands of beta-sheet, comprising residues 2-17, remain in the A-state, compared to five strands in the N-state. NOEs indicative of an alpha-helix, comprising residues 25-33, were also identified. These residues were also helical in the N-state. In the N-state, residues in this helix were in contact with residues from the first two strands of beta-sheet. It is likely, therefore, that residues 1-33 comprise a folded domain in the A-state of ubiquitin. On the basis of 1H alpha chemical shifts and weak short-range NOEs, residues 34-76 do not adopt a rigid secondary structure but favor a helical conformation. This observation may be related to the helix-inducing effects of the
methanol
present. The secondary structure presented here differs from and is more thorough than that determined previously by two-dimensional 1H methods [Harding et al. (1991) Biochemistry, 30, 3120-3128].
...
PMID:Heteronuclear three-dimensional NMR spectroscopy of a partially denatured protein: the A-state of human ubiquitin. 839 71
Time-resolved NMR spectroscopy is used to studychanges in protein conformation based on the elapsed time after a change in the solvent composition of a protein solution. The use of a micromixer and a continuous-flow method is described where the contents of two capillary flows are mixed rapidly, and then the NMR spectra of the combined flow are recorded at precise time points. The distance after mixing the two fluids and flow rates define the solvent-protein interaction time; this method allows the measurement of NMR spectra at precise mixing time points independent of spectral acquisition time. Integration of a micromixer and a microcoil NMR probe enables low-microliter volumes to be used without losing significant sensitivity in the NMR measurement.
Ubiquitin
, the model compound, changes its conformation from native to A-state at low pH and in 40% or higher
methanol
/water solvents. Proton NMR resonances of the His-68 and the Tyr-59 of ubiquitin are used to probe the conformational changes. Mixing ubiquitin and
methanol
solutions under low pH at microliter per minute flow rates yields both native and A-states. As the flow rate decreases, yielding longer reaction times, the population of the A-state increases. The micromixer-NMR system can probe reaction kinetics on a time scale of seconds.
...
PMID:Micromixer-based time-resolved NMR: applications to ubiquitin protein conformation. 1262 91
We report on the use of time-resolved Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) to study chemically induced conformational changes of proteins using the example of ubiquitin. For this purpose a micromachined mixer is coupled to a conventional IR transmission cell with a pathlength of 25 microm and operated in both the continuous and the stopped-flow mode. This experimental set-up allows the elucidation of reaction pathways in the time frame of about 500 milliseconds to seconds with little reagent consumption and low pressure. For continuous flow measurements employed in the time frame from 0.5 to 1.4 s the reaction time is determined by the flow rate used as the connection between the point of confluence in the micromixer and the flow cell was kept constant in all experiments. For stopped-flow experiments (>1.4 s) the time is determined by data acquisition of the rapid scanning infrared spectrometer.
Ubiquitin
, a small well-known protein with 76 amino acid residues, changes its conformation from native to A-state with the addition of
methanol
under low pH conditions. We investigated the conformational change in the time frame from 0.5 to 10 s by mixing ubiquitin (20%
methanol
-d(4)) with an 80%
methanol
-d(4) solution at pD 2 by evaluating the time dependent changes in the amide I band of the protein.
...
PMID:Time-resolved Fourier transform infrared spectrometry using a microfabricated continuous flow mixer: application to protein conformation study using the example of ubiquitin. 1510 Jul 87
A KCl-soluble, albumin/globulin fraction of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) starchy endosperm was further separated into a
methanol
-insoluble fraction that contained metabolic proteins and a
methanol
-soluble fraction that contained "chloroform-methanol" or CM-like proteins. Reduction of the disulfide bonds of the CM proteins with thioredoxin or dithiothreitol altered their properties so that, like the metabolic proteins, they were insoluble in
methanol
. Glutathione had little effect, indicating dithiol specificity. Proteomic analysis of the CM protein fraction revealed the presence of isoforms of low molecular weight disulfide proteins (alpha-amylase, alpha-amylase/trypsin and WCI proteinase inhibitors, lipid transfer proteins, gamma-thionins), stress enzymes (Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase and peroxidase), storage proteins (alpha-, gamma- and omega-gliadins, low molecular weight glutenin subunits and globulins of the avenin N9 type), and a component of protein degradation (
polyubiquitin
). These findings support the view that, in addition to modifying activity and increasing protease sensitivity, reduction by thioredoxin alters protein solubility, thereby promoting processes of the grain starchy endosperm, notably the mobilization of reserves during germination and seedling development.
...
PMID:Thioredoxin reduction alters the solubility of proteins of wheat starchy endosperm: an early event in cereal germination. 1511 15
Study of model beta-hairpin peptides allows for better understanding of the factors involved in the formation of beta-sheet secondary structure in proteins. It is known that turn sequence, sidechain-sidechain interactions, interstrand hydrogen bonding, and beta-sheet propensity of residues are all important for beta-hairpin stability in aqueous solution. However, interactions of the sidechains of the terminal residues of hairpins are thought to contribute little to overall hairpin stability since these residues are typically frayed. Here, the authors report a stabilizing hydrophobic cluster of residues at the termini of the naturally occurring excised N-terminal beta-hairpin of
Ubiquitin
that folds autonomously in aqueous solution. Our data show that deletion of Met1 and Val17 from this hairpin destabilized the folded state in both aqueous solution and in aqueous-
methanol
solutions. These results suggest that interactions of terminal residues which are usually frayed can nonetheless contribute significantly to overall stability of beta-hairpin.
...
PMID:Stabilization of the N-terminal beta-hairpin of ubiquitin by a terminal hydrophobic cluster. 1780
Ubiquitin
carboxyl-terminal hydrolases (UCHs) are implicated in the proteolytic processing of polymeric ubiquitin. The high specificity for the recognition site makes UCHs useful enzymes for in vitro cleavage of ubiquitin fusion proteins. In this work, an active C-terminal His-tagged UCH from Drosophila melanogaster (DmUCH) was produced as a secretory form in a recombinant strain of the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. The production of recombinant DmUCH by Mut(s) strain was much higher than that by Mut(+) strain, which was confirmed by Western blot analysis. When expression was induced at pH 6.0 in a BMMY/
methanol
medium, the concentration of recombinant DmUCH reached 210 mg l(-1). With the (His)(6)-tag, the recombinant DmUCH was easily purified by Ni-NTA chromatography and 18 mg pure active DmUCH were obtained from 100ml culture broth supernatant.
Ubiquitin
-magainin fusion protein was efficiently cleaved by DmUCH, yielding recombinant magainin with high antimicrobial activity. After removing the contaminants by Ni-NTA chromatography, recombinant magainin was purified to homogeneity easily by reversed-phase HPLC. Analysis of the recombinant magainin by ESI-MS showed that the molecular weight of the purified recombinant magainin was 2465 Da, which perfectly matches the mass calculated from the amino acid sequence. The result of mass spectrometry confirmed that the purified His-tagged DmUCH can recognize the ubiquitin-magainin fusion protein and cleave it at the carboxyl terminus of ubiquitin precisely. Our results showed that P. pastoris is a robust system to express the secreted form of DmUCH.
...
PMID:High-level expression of active recombinant ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase of Drosophila melanogaster in Pichia pastoris. 1881 75
Gas-phase ion/ion chemistry was coupled to ion mobility/mass spectrometry analysis to correlate the structure of gaseous ubiquitin to its solution structures with selective covalent structural probes. Collision cross section (CCS) distributions were measured to ensure the ubiquitin ions were not unfolded when they were introduced to the gas phase. Aqueous solutions stabilizing the native state of ubiquitin yielded folded ubiquitin structures with CCS values consistent with previously published literature. Denaturing solutions favored several families of unfolded conformations for most of the charge states evaluated. Gas-phase covalent labeling via ion/ion reactions was followed by collision-induced dissociation of the intact, labeled protein to determine which residues were labeled.
Ubiquitin
5
+
and 6
+
electrosprayed from aqueous conditions were covalently modified preferentially at the lysine 29 and arginine 54 positions, indicating that elements of three-dimensional structure were maintained in the gas phase. On the other hand, most ubiquitin ions produced in denaturing conditions were labeled at various other lysine residues, likely due to the availability of additional sites following
methanol
- and low-pH-induced unfolding. These data support the conservation of ubiquitin structural elements in the gas phase. The research presented here provides the basis for residue-specific characterization of biomolecules in the gas phase.
...
PMID:Ion Mobility and Gas-Phase Covalent Labeling Study of the Structure and Reactivity of Gaseous Ubiquitin Ions Electrosprayed from Aqueous and Denaturing Solutions. 3225 27