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Portrait of Sara Snogerup Linse

Sara Linse

Professor

Portrait of Sara Snogerup Linse

Intra- versus intermolecular interactions in monellin: Contribution of surface charges to protein assembly

Author

  • Wei-Feng Xue
  • Olga Szczepankiewicz
  • Mikael Bauer
  • Eva Thulin
  • Sara Linse

Summary, in English

The relative significance of weak non-covalent interactions in biological context has been much debated. Here, we have addressed the contribution of Coulombic interactions to protein stability and assembly experimentally. The sweet protein monellin, a non-covalently linked heterodimeric protein, was chosen for this study because of its ability to spontaneously reconstitute from separated fragments. The reconstitution of monellin mutants containing large surface charge perturbations was compared to the thermostability of structurally equivalent single-chain monellin containing the same sets of mutations under varying salt concentrations. The affinity between monellin fragments is found to correlate with the thermostability of single chain monellin, indicating the involvement of the same underlying Coulombic interactions. This confirms that there are no principal differences in the interactions involved in folding and binding. Based on comparison with a previous mutational study involving hydrophobic core residues, the relative contribution of Coulombic interactions to stability and affinity is modest. However, the Coulombic perturbations only affect the association rates of reconstitution in contrast to perturbations involving hydrophobic residues, which affect primarily the dissociation rates. These results indicate that Coulombic interactions are likely to be of main importance for the association of protein assembly, relevant for functions of proteins. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Department/s

  • Biophysical Chemistry

Publishing year

2006

Language

English

Pages

1244-1255

Publication/Series

Journal of Molecular Biology

Volume

358

Issue

5

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Physical Chemistry

Keywords

  • interactions
  • electrostatic
  • protein reconstitution
  • fragment complementation
  • global analysis
  • protein folding and binding

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1089-8638