Structure and stability of recombinant bovine odorant-binding protein: III. Peculiarities of the wild type bOBP unfolding in crowded milieu

Laboratory of structural dynamics, stability and folding of proteins, Institute of Cytology, Russian Academy of Sciences, St.Petersburg, Russia
Department of Molecular Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa, Fl, United States
DOI
10.7287/peerj.preprints.1454v1
Subject Areas
Biochemistry, Biophysics, Molecular Biology
Keywords
odorant-binding protein, macromoleclar crowding, disulfide bond, ligand binding, conformational stability, domain swapping, unfolding-refolding reaction
Copyright
© 2015 Stepanenko et al.
Licence
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ PrePrints) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
Cite this article
Stepanenko OV, Roginskii DO, Stepanenko OV, Kuznetsova IM, Uversky VN, Turoverov KK. 2015. Structure and stability of recombinant bovine odorant-binding protein: III. Peculiarities of the wild type bOBP unfolding in crowded milieu. PeerJ PrePrints 3:e1454v1

Abstract

Contrarily to the majority of the members of the lipocalin family, which are stable monomers with the specific OBP fold (a β-barrel consisting of a 8-stranded anti-parallel β-sheet followed by a short α-helical segment, a ninth β-strand, and a disordered C-terminal tail) and a conserved disulfide bond, bovine odorant-binding protein (bOBP) does not have such a disulfide bond and forms a domain-swapped dimer that involves crossing the α-helical region from each monomer over the β-barrel of the other monomer. Furthermore, although natural bOBP isolated from bovine tissues exists as a stable domain-swapped dimer, recombinant bOBP has decreased dimerization potential and therefore exists as a mixture of monomeric and dimeric variants. In this article, we investigated the effect model crowding agents of similar chemical nature but different molecular mass on conformational stability of the recombinant bOBP. These experiments were conducted in order shed light on the potential influence of model crowded environment on the unfolding-refolding equilibrium. To this end, we looked at the influence of PEG-600, PEG-4000, and PEG-12000 in concentrations of 80, 150, and 300 mg/mL on the equilibrium unfolding and refolding transitions induced in the recombinant bOBP by guanidine hydrochloride.

Author Comment

This manuscript is submitted to PeerJ for review. It is a part of series of articlesdedicated to the analysis of the effect of the environmental feature (including the presence of crowding agents) on structural properties and conformational stability of bOBP.