Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, A.F.R.C. Institute of Arable Crops Research, Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, Herts. AL5 2JQ, U.K.
2. Department of Chemistry, Birkbeck College, 20 Gordon Street, London WC1H OAJ, U.K.
Abstract
C hordein, a storage protein from barley grains, has an Mr of about 53,000, and consists predominantly of repeated octapeptides with a consensus sequence of Pro-Gln-Gln-Pro-Phe-Pro-Gln-Gln. Previously reported hydrodynamic and c.d. studies indicate the presence of beta-turns, the repetitive nature of which may lead to the formation of a loose spiral. In order to study these turns we have compared the structures of a synthetic peptide corresponding to the consensus repeat motif and total C hordein by using c.d. and Fourier-transform i.r. spectroscopy. The synthetic peptide exhibited spectra typical of beta I/III reverse turns when dissolved in trifluoroethanol at 22 degrees C and in water at 70 degrees C, but ‘random-coil’-like spectra in water at 22 degrees C. The whole protein also showed increases in beta I/III reverse turns when dissolved in increasing concentrations of trifluoroethanol (50-100%, v/v) or heated in ethanol/water (7:3, v/v). Two cryogenic solvent systems were used to determine the c.d. spectra of the peptide and protein at temperatures down to -100 degrees C. Methanol/glycerol (9:1, v/v) and ethanediol/water (2:1, v/v) were selected as analogues of trifluoroethanol/water and water respectively. The peptide exhibited beta I/III-reverse-turn and ‘random-coil’-like spectra in methanol/glycerol and ethanediol/water respectively at 22 degrees C, but a spectrum similar to that of a poly-L-proline II helix in both solvents at -100 degrees C. Similarly the proportion of this spectral type also increased when the whole protein was cooled in both solvents. These results indicate that a poly-L-proline II conformation at low temperatures is in equilibrium with a beta I/III-turn-rich conformation at higher temperatures. The latter conformation is also favoured in solvents of low dielectric constant such as trifluoroethanol. The ‘random-coil‘-like spectra exhibited by the protein and peptide in high-dielectric-constant solvents at room temperature may result from a mixture of the two conformations rather than from the random-coil state.
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
74 articles.
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