Folding of Aplysia limacina apomyoglobin involves an intermediate in common with other evolutionarily distant globins

In the globin family, similarities in the folding mechanism have been found among different mammalian apomyoglobins (apoMb). The best-characterized intermediate of sperm whale apoMb, called I-AGH, is mainly stabilized by nativelike contacts among the A, G, and H helices involving a cluster of hydrop...

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Published in:Biochemistry
Main Authors: MUSTO R., BIGOTTI, Maria Giulia, TRAVAGLINI ALLOCATELLI, Carlo, BRUNORI, Maurizio, CUTRUZZOLA', Francesca
Other Authors: Musto, R., Bigotti, Maria Giulia, Brunori, Maurizio, Cutruzzola', Francesca
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Chemical Society:1155 Sixteenth Street Northwest:Washington, DC 20036:(800)227-5558, EMAIL: service@acs.org, INTERNET: http://www.pubs.acs.org, Fax: (614)447-3671 2004
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11573/42406
https://doi.org/10.1021/bi035319l
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Summary:In the globin family, similarities in the folding mechanism have been found among different mammalian apomyoglobins (apoMb). The best-characterized intermediate of sperm whale apoMb, called I-AGH, is mainly stabilized by nativelike contacts among the A, G, and H helices involving a cluster of hydrophobic residues that includes two conserved tryptophans. To verify the hypothesis of a common intermediate in the folding of all members of the globin family, we have extensively studied a sitedirected mutant of the myoglobin from Aplysia limacina, distantly related to the mammalian counterpart, in which one of the two tryptophans in the A-G-H cluster [i.e., Trp(H8)130] has been mutated to tyrosine. The results presented here show that this mutation destabilizes both the native state and the acid intermediate IA but exerts little or no effect on the thermally stable core of an intermediate species (called IT) peculiar to Aplysia apomyoglobin. Dynamic quenching of Trp emission by acrylamide provides information on the accessibility of the chromophores at the native and the intermediate states of wild-type and mutant Aplysia apomyoglobin, consistent with the thermodynamics. Our results agree well with those obtained for the corresponding topological position of apomyoglobin from sperm whale and clearly show that the H8 position is involved in the stabilization of the main intermediate in both apoproteins. This residue thus plays a role which is evolutionarily conserved in the globin family from invertebrates to mammals; our results support the contention that the A-G-H cluster is important in the folding pathway of different globins.