Knowledge of folding/unfolding pathway is fundamental basis to study protein structure and stability. Human carbonic anhydrase II (HCAII) is a ∼29kDa, β-sheet dominated monomeric protein of 259 amino acid residues. In the present study, the urea-induced denaturation of HCAII was carried out which was a tri-phasic process, i.e., N (native) ↔ X ↔ X ↔ D (denatured) with stable intermediates X and X populated around 2 and 4M urea, respectively. The far-UV CD was used to characterize the intermediate states (X and X) for secondary structural content, near-UV CD for tertiary structure, dynamic light scattering for hydrodynamic radius and ANS fluorescence spectroscopy for the presence of exposed hydrophobic patches. Based on these experiments, we concluded that urea-induced X state has characteristics of molten globule state while X state bears characteristics features of pre-molten globule state. Characterization of the intermediates on the folding pathway will contribute to a deeper understanding of the structure-function relationship of HCAII. Furthermore, this system may provide an excellent model to study urea stress and the strategies adopted by the organisms to combat such a stress.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2016.10.073DOI Listing

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