The long term objective of the research described in this application is the development of a quantitative model to describe how the 149 amino acids of staphylococcal nuclease determine the structure of the native state, its stability, and its folding pathway. To achieve this objective, extensive use will be made of genetic engineering methods to systematically alter this small protein's amino acid sequence in a variety of ways. 1) Each amino acid residue will be mutated to both alanine and glycine to remove the wild-type side chain. 2) Single alanine and glycine residues will be inserted between a number of pairs of wild-type residues to alter the spacing between chain segments. 3) Many of the 20 amino acids will be substituted at several select positions to examine the effect of different side chains. 4) Randomly induced mutations that lower the stability of nuclease to reversible denaturation will be recovered using a simple plate assay. To quantitate the effects of these sequence modifications on structure and folding, a variety of biophysical methods will be used in the characterization of highly purified mutant proteins. As a first step, the free energy change deltaG on denaturation and the rate of change of delta G with respect to denaturant concentration will be determined by monitoring the equilibrium unfolding reaction via intrinsic fluorescence and circular dichroism. Correlations will then be sought between these two values and a number of parameters that describe a residue's local environment in the native state. For unusual mutants such as stable insertions, the structural consequences will be identified by x-ray crystallographic methods in collaboration with other laboratories. Mutants that appear to alter the residual structure of the denatured state will be recombined into large fragments of nuclease ( which serve as models of the denatured state) and their residual structure quantitated by circular dichroism and gel filtration. To examine mutant effects on the denatured state of full length protein, the techniques of fluorescence energy transfer will be used. A detailed study of a presumptive intermediated state of folding dominated by hydrophobic interactions will be continued, including structural studies by high resolution proton NMR. Kinetic analysis of the rates of folding and unfolding will be initiated. And the patterns of hydrophobic contacts in a number of small proteins, including staph nuclease mutants, will be characterized with the mathematical tools of Graph Theory.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM034171-10
Application #
3284730
Study Section
Molecular and Cellular Biophysics Study Section (BBCA)
Project Start
1982-05-01
Project End
1995-04-30
Budget Start
1993-05-01
Budget End
1994-04-30
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
1993
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
045911138
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21218
Alexandrescu, A T; Abeygunawardana, C; Shortle, D (1994) Structure and dynamics of a denatured 131-residue fragment of staphylococcal nuclease: a heteronuclear NMR study. Biochemistry 33:1063-72
Alexandrescu, A T; Shortle, D (1994) Backbone dynamics of a highly disordered 131 residue fragment of staphylococcal nuclease. J Mol Biol 242:527-46
Shortle, D (1994) Assignment of amino acid type in 1H-15N correlation spectra by labeling with 14N-amino acids. J Magn Reson B 105:88-90
Stites, W E; Meeker, A K; Shortle, D (1994) Evidence for strained interactions between side-chains and the polypeptide backbone. J Mol Biol 235:27-32
Shortle, D; Abeygunawardana, C (1993) NMR analysis of the residual structure in the denatured state of an unusual mutant of staphylococcal nuclease. Structure 1:121-34
Gittis, A G; Stites, W E; Lattman, E E (1993) The phase transition between a compact denatured state and a random coil state in staphylococcal nuclease is first-order. J Mol Biol 232:718-24
Li, Y K; Kuliopulos, A; Mildvan, A S et al. (1993) Environments and mechanistic roles of the tyrosine residues of delta 5-3-ketosteroid isomerase. Biochemistry 32:1816-24
Green, S M; Shortle, D (1993) Patterns of nonadditivity between pairs of stability mutations in staphylococcal nuclease. Biochemistry 32:10131-9
Sondek, J; Shortle, D (1992) A general strategy for random insertion and substitution mutagenesis: substoichiometric coupling of trinucleotide phosphoramidites. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 89:3581-5
Green, S M; Meeker, A K; Shortle, D (1992) Contributions of the polar, uncharged amino acids to the stability of staphylococcal nuclease: evidence for mutational effects on the free energy of the denatured state. Biochemistry 31:5717-28

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