Thermodynamic consequences of changing a sulfur atom to a methylene group in the M13Nle mutation in Ribonuclease-S

Thomson, James ; Ratnaparkhi, Girish S. ; Varadarajan, Raghavan ; Sturtevant, Julian M. ; Richards, Frederic M. (1994) Thermodynamic consequences of changing a sulfur atom to a methylene group in the M13Nle mutation in Ribonuclease-S Biochemistry, 33 (28). pp. 8587-8593. ISSN 0006-2960

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Official URL: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/bi00194a025

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi00194a025

Abstract

Two fragments of pancreatic ribonuclease A, a truncated version of S-peptide (residues 1-15) and S-protein (residues 21-124), combine to give a catalytically active complex. We have substituted the wild-type residue at position 13, methionine (Met), with norleucine (Nle), where the only covalent change is the replacement of the sulfur atom with a methylene group. The thermodynamic parameters associated with the binding of this variant to S-protein, determined by titration calorimetry in the temperature range 10-40 °C, are reported and compared to values previously reported [Varadarajan, R., Connelly, P. R., Sturtevant, J. M., & Richards, F. M. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 1421-1426] for other position 13 analogs. The differences in the free energy and enthalpy of binding between the Met and Nle peptides are 0.6 and 7.9 kcal/mol at 25° C, respectively. These differences are slightly larger than, but comparable to, the differences in the values for the Met/Ile and Met/Leu pairs. The structure of the mutant complex was determined to 1.85 Angstrom resolution and refined to an R-factor of 17.4% The structures of mutant and wild-type complexes are practically identical although the Nle side chain has a significantly higher average B-factor than the corresponding Met side chain. In contrast, the B-factors of the atoms of the cage of residues surrounding position 13 are all somewhat lower in the Nle variant than in the Met wild-type. Thus, the large differences in the binding enthalpy appear to reside entirely in the difference in chemical properties or dynamic behavior of the -S- and -CH2- groups and not in differences in the geometry of the side chains or the internal cavity surface. In addition, a novel method of obtaining protein stability data by means of isothermal titration calorimetry is introduced.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Chemical Society.
ID Code:57271
Deposited On:26 Aug 2011 04:17
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