AI Article Synopsis

  • The native state of alpha(1)-antitrypsin (alpha(1)AT) is a kinetically trapped intermediate that transforms into a stable form when binding to a target protease, but the details of this process are not fully understood.
  • During this study, researchers proposed that a significant part of alpha(1)AT undergoes "functional unfolding" during complex formation, which allows it to overcome energy barriers to reach a final stable conformation.
  • Using hydrogen-deuterium exchange and mass spectrometry, they found that extensive regions of alpha(1)AT, including both expected and unexpected areas, unfold temporarily in the process of forming a complex with bovine beta-trypsin, suggesting that unfolding is essential for the

Article Abstract

The native state of alpha(1)-antitrypsin (alpha(1)AT), a member of the serine protease inhibitor (serpin) family, is considered a kinetically trapped folding intermediate that converts to a more stable form upon complex formation with a target protease. Although previous structural and mutational studies of alpha(1)AT revealed the structural basis of the native strain and the kinetic trap, the mechanism of how the native molecule overcomes the kinetic barrier to reach the final stable conformation during complex formation remains unknown. We hypothesized that during complex formation, a substantial portion of the molecule undergoes unfolding, which we dubbed functional unfolding. Hydrogen-deuterium exchange coupled with ESI-MS was used to analyze this serpin in three forms: native, complexing, and complexed with bovine beta-trypsin. Comparing the deuterium content at the corresponding regions of these three samples, we probed the unfolding of alpha(1)AT during complex formation. A substantial portion of the alpha(1)AT molecule unfolded transiently during complex formation, including not only the regions expected from previous structural studies, such as the reactive site loop, helix F, and the following loop, but also regions not predicted previously, such as helix A, strand 6 of beta-sheet B, and the N terminus. Such unfolding of the native interactions may elevate the free energy level of the kinetically trapped native serpin sufficiently to cross the transition state during complex formation. In the current study, we provide evidence that protein unfolding has to accompany functional execution of the protein molecule.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2689767PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M800365-MCP200DOI Listing

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