Refolding of denatured and denatured/reduced lysozyme at high concentrations

Raman, Bakthisaran ; Ramakrishna, Tangirala ; Mohan Rao, Ch. (1996) Refolding of denatured and denatured/reduced lysozyme at high concentrations Journal of Biological Chemistry, 271 (29). pp. 17067-17072. ISSN 0021-9258

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: http://www.jbc.org/content/271/29/17067.short

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.271.29.17067

Abstract

Refolding of proteins at high concentrations often results in aggregation. To gain insight into the molecular aspects of refolding and to improve the yield of active protein, we have studied the refolding of lysozyme either from its denatured state or from its denatured/reduced state. Refolding of denatured lysozyme, even at 1 mg/ml, yields fully active enzyme without aggregation. However, refolding of denatured/reduced lysozyme into buffer that lacks thiol/disulfide reagents leads to aggregation. Thiol/disulfide redox reagents such as cysteine/cystine and reduced/oxidized glutathione facilitate the renaturation, with the yield depending on their absolute concentrations. We have obtained an ~70% renaturation yield upon refolding of lysozyme at 150 μg/ml. The cysteine/cystine redox system is more efficient compared with the glutathione redox system. When lysozyme is refolded in the absence of redox reagents, a transient intermediate that has regained a significant amount of secondary structure is formed. The tryptophans in this intermediate are as exposed to water as in the fully unfolded protein. It shows increased exposure of hydrophobic surfaces compared with the native or completely unfolded enzyme. This aggregation-prone intermediate folds to active enzyme upon addition of oxidized glutathione before the aggregation process starts. These properties of the intermediate in the refolding pathway of lysozyme are similar to those proposed for the molten globule.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
ID Code:68004
Deposited On:02 Nov 2011 03:04
Last Modified:02 Nov 2011 03:04

Repository Staff Only: item control page