Hyperthermophilic L-asparaginase bypasses monomeric intermediates during folding to retain cooperativity and avoid amyloid assembly

July 28, 2017

Title

Hyperthermophilic L-asparaginase bypasses monomeric intermediates during folding to retain cooperativity and avoid amyloid assembly

Author

Dushyant K. Garg, Bishwajit Kundu

Year

2017

Journal

Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics

Abstract

In obligate dimeric proteins of hyperthermophilic origin the question whether the native dimer is obtained by association of folded monomers or through concomitant folding and assembly of subunits has intrigued researchers. To find an answer we studied the folding of a dimeric enzyme L-asparaginase from Pyrococcus furiosus (PfA) for which we reported earlier that it unfolds cooperatively without populating folded monomeric intermediates. However, in the present study we report the finding of a folded monomeric intermediate of PfA under acidic condition. This monomer, although inactive, displayed secondary and tertiary structural features identical to the native protein and re-assembled to active dimeric form upon reversal of pH. The monomer is conformationally flexible and thermodynamically and kinetically less stable than the native dimer. Interestingly, when incubated at 60 °C the folded monomer, with exposed ANS-binding hydrophobic surfaces, spontaneously converted to amyloid fibrils. On the basis of our data we propose that PfA directly assembles into a multimeric form perhaps as an evolutionary adaptation to avoid accumulation of aggregation prone monomeric intermediates.

Instrument

J-815

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Secondary structure, Chemical stability, Protein folding, Kinetics, Thermal stability, Thermodynamics, Biochemistry