The objective of this project continues to be the use of NMR spectroscopy and nonradiative excitation energy transfer to determine the structure of intermediates (and thereby the interactions that lead to them) in the folding pathways of proteins. The primary aim is to solve structural problems related to biological function. Specifically, the aim is to solve the problem of how proteins fold into their native conformations. For this purpose, experimental techniques are used to provide an understanding of the internal interactions that stabilize native proteins in aqueous solution. Use is made of kinetic measurements, protein fractionation, peptide mapping, recombinant DNA procedures, NMR spectroscopy, and nonradiative excitation energy transfer to determine the pathways of folding of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A. Ribonuclease A contains four disulfide bonds. The experimental work will be concerned with the folding of the disulfide-reduced protein during the oxidation of its sulfhydryl groups and with the folding of the disulfide-intact protein from its denatured form. The oxidative folding experiments will be carried out to identify the kinetically relevant species (and structural features therein) that lead to one-, two-, and three-disulfide intermediates and to the transitions between these intermediates along the folding pathway. The disulfide-intact experiments will provide important information to distinguish between rates of conformational changes and disulfide exchange, and information about structure formation as the protein folds. An understanding of the interactions in proteins is of potential applicability to the elucidation of the role of conformation in biological processes, e.g. the undesirable association of sickle-cell hemoglobin, or the induction of an oncogene product whose properties involve a conformational change when only one amino acid residue in the sequence is changed.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM024893-27
Application #
2444475
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG3-BBCB (01))
Project Start
1978-04-01
Project End
2000-06-30
Budget Start
1997-07-01
Budget End
1998-06-30
Support Year
27
Fiscal Year
1997
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Cornell University
Department
Chemistry
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
City
Ithaca
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
14850
Vila, Jorge A (2012) Limiting values of the 15N chemical shift of the imidazole ring of histidine at high pH. J Phys Chem B 116:6665-9
Gahl, Robert F; Oswald, Robert E; Scheraga, Harold A (2012) Identification of formation of initial native structure in onconase from an unfolded state. Biochemistry 51:521-32
Vila, Jorge A; Arnautova, Yelena A; Vorobjev, Yury et al. (2011) Assessing the fractions of tautomeric forms of the imidazole ring of histidine in proteins as a function of pH. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 108:5602-7
Martin, Osvaldo A; Villegas, Myriam E; Vila, Jorge A et al. (2010) Analysis of 13Calpha and 13Cbeta chemical shifts of cysteine and cystine residues in proteins: a quantum chemical approach. J Biomol NMR 46:217-25
Lewandowska, Agnieszka; Oldziej, Stanislaw; Liwo, Adam et al. (2010) Mechanism of formation of the C-terminal beta-hairpin of the B3 domain of the immunoglobulin binding protein G from Streptococcus. III. Dynamics of long-range hydrophobic interactions. Proteins 78:723-37
Vila, Jorge A; Serrano, Pedro; Wüthrich, Kurt et al. (2010) Sequential nearest-neighbor effects on computed 13Calpha chemical shifts. J Biomol NMR 48:23-30
Skwierawska, Agnieszka; Zmudzinska, Wioletta; Oldziej, Stanislaw et al. (2009) Mechanism of formation of the C-terminal beta-hairpin of the B3 domain of the immunoglobulin binding protein G from Streptococcus. II. Interplay of local backbone conformational dynamics and long-range hydrophobic interactions in hairpin formation. Proteins 76:637-54
Gahl, Robert F; Scheraga, Harold A (2009) Oxidative folding pathway of onconase, a ribonuclease homologue: insight into oxidative folding mechanisms from a study of two homologues. Biochemistry 48:2740-51
Skwierawska, Agnieszka; Oldziej, Stanislaw; Liwo, Adam et al. (2009) Conformational studies of the C-terminal 16-amino-acid-residue fragment of the B3 domain of the immunoglobulin binding protein G from Streptococcus. Biopolymers 91:37-51
Arnautova, Yelena A; Vila, Jorge A; Martin, Osvaldo A et al. (2009) What can we learn by computing 13Calpha chemical shifts for X-ray protein models? Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 65:697-703

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