AI Article Synopsis

  • Our understanding of protein folding in extremophiles, specifically SAMP1 from Haloferax volcanii, is still developing, highlighting its potential similarity to early primordial proteins.
  • Experiments revealed that increased sodium chloride concentration significantly enhances the refolding speed and stabilizes SAMP1, demonstrating more than a 100-fold increase in folding rate at higher salt levels.
  • The study indicates that electrostatic interactions, particularly repulsion among negatively charged residues, play a crucial role in protein stability and folding, suggesting that proteins have evolved to adapt to their extreme environments.

Article Abstract

Our knowledge of the folding behavior of proteins from extremophiles is limited at this time. These proteins may more closely resemble the primordial proteins selected in early evolution under extreme conditions. The small archaeal modifier protein 1 (SAMP1) studied in this report is an 87-residue protein with a β-grasp fold found in the halophile Haloferax volcanii from the Dead Sea. To gain insight into the effects of salt on the stability and folding mechanism of SAMP1, we conducted equilibrium and kinetic folding experiments as a function of sodium chloride concentration. The results revealed that increasing ionic strength accelerates refolding and slows down unfolding of SAMP1, giving rise to a pronounced salt-induced stabilization. With increasing NaCl concentration, the rate of folding observed via a combination of continuous-flow (0.1-2 ms time range) and stopped-flow measurements (>2 ms) exhibited a >100-fold increase between 0.1 and 1.5 M NaCl and leveled off at higher concentrations. Using the Linderström-Lang smeared charge formalism to model electrostatic interactions in ground and transition states encountered during folding, we showed that the observed salt dependence is dominated by Debye-Hückel screening of electrostatic repulsion among numerous negatively charged residues. Comparisons are also drawn with three well-studied mesophilic members of the β-grasp superfamily: protein G, protein L, and ubiquitin. Interestingly, the folding rate of SAMP1 in 3 M sodium chloride is comparable to that of protein G, ubiquitin, and protein L at lower ionic strength. The results indicate the important role of electrostatic interactions in protein folding and imply that proteins have evolved to minimize unfavorable charge-charge interactions under their specific native conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8874027PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2022.01.010DOI Listing

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