Carboxyl group-modified myoglobin shows membrane-permeabilizing activity.

Arch Biochem Biophys

Institute of Biomedical Sciences, National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaohsiung, 804, Taiwan; Department of Biotechnology, Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung, 807, Taiwan. Electronic address:

Published: October 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • * Mass spectrometry revealed that semicarbazide attached to most carboxyl groups in Mb, leading to a loss of the heme group and changes in protein structure, specifically reducing α-helix content and increasing structural flexibility.
  • * The modified myoglobin (SEM-Mb) was found to increase membrane permeability, contrasting with unmodified Mb, which suggests that altering the negatively charged carboxyl groups enables SEM-Mb to adopt a more active conformation for interacting with membranes.

Article Abstract

In this study, we investigated whether modification of the carboxyl group with semicarbazide-enabled myoglobin (Mb) exhibits membrane-perturbing activity in physiological solutions. Mass spectrometry analysis showed that semicarbazide molecules were coupled to 19 of the 22 carboxyl groups in semicarbazide-modified Mb (SEM-Mb). Measurements of the absorption and circular dichroism spectra indicated that SEM-Mb lost its heme group and reduced the content of the α-helix structure in Mb. The microenvironment surrounding Trp residues in Mb changes after blocking negatively charged residues, as shown by fluorescence quenching studies. The results of the trifluoroethanol-induced structural transition indicated that SEM-Mb had higher structural flexibility than that of Mb. SEM-Mb, but not Mb, induced the permeability of bilayer membranes. Both proteins showed similar lipid-binding affinities. The conformation of SEM-Mb and Mb changed upon binding to lipid vesicles or a membrane-mimicking environment composed of SDS micelles, suggesting that membrane interaction modes differ. Unlike lipid-bound Mb, Trp residues in lipid-bound SEM-Mb are located at the protein-lipid interface. Altogether, our data indicate that modifying negatively charged groups relieves the structural constraints in Mb, consequently switching Mb structure to an active conformation that exhibits membrane-permeabilizing activity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.abb.2022.109371DOI Listing

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