CEFOBI   05405
CENTRO DE ESTUDIOS FOTOSINTETICOS Y BIOQUIMICOS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Conformational changes of maize and wheat NADP-malic enzyme studied by quenching of protein native fluorescence
Autor/es:
SPAMPINATO, C.P.; FALCONE FERREYRA, M.L.; ANDREO, C.S.
Revista:
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules
Editorial:
IPC Science and Technology Press.
Referencias:
Año: 2007 vol. 41 p. 64 - 71
ISSN:
0141-8130
Resumen:
Quenching of tryptophan fluorescence of maize and wheat NADP-malic enzyme by KI and acrylamide was studied after denaturating proteins with guanidine hydrochloride, and subjecting them to different pH values or temperatures. Protein unfolding by guanidine hydrochloride resulted in a red shift of the fluorescence spectrum, providing further support for the motion that several of the tryptophan residues evolved from an apolar to a polar environment. Protein denaturation was accompanied by an increase in the effective dynamic quenching constant values and by loss of the enzyme’s activities. Thermal denaturation gave results consistent with the ones observed for chemical denaturation suggesting that a putative intermediate is involved in the denaturation process. Finally, exposure of both enzymes at various pH values allowed us to infer the number of accessible tryptophan residues in the different oligomeric conformations. The results suggest that the aggregation process seems to be different for each enzyme. Thus, as the maize enzyme associated from monomer to tetramer, one tryptophan residue would change from a polar to an apolar environment, while the association of the wheat enzyme would cause that two tryptophan residues to be excluded from quenching. Hitherto, quenching of the tryptophan fluorescence provides a good tool for studying conformational changes of proteins. The future availability of the crystal structures of plant NADP-malic enzymes will offer a good validation point for our model and the technology used.