Cargando…

Inhibitor and Substrate Binding Induced Stability of HIV-1 Protease against Sequential Dissociation and Unfolding Revealed by High Pressure Spectroscopy and Kinetics

High-pressure methods have become an interesting tool of investigation of structural stability of proteins. They are used to study protein unfolding, but dissociation of oligomeric proteins can be addressed this way, too. HIV-1 protease, although an interesting object of biophysical experiments, has...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ingr, Marek, Lange, Reinhard, Halabalová, Věra, Yehya, Alaa, Hrnčiřík, Josef, Chevalier-Lucia, Dominique, Palmade, Laetitia, Blayo, Claire, Konvalinka, Jan, Dumay, Eliane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4362767/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25781460
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119099
_version_ 1782361843219562496
author Ingr, Marek
Lange, Reinhard
Halabalová, Věra
Yehya, Alaa
Hrnčiřík, Josef
Chevalier-Lucia, Dominique
Palmade, Laetitia
Blayo, Claire
Konvalinka, Jan
Dumay, Eliane
author_facet Ingr, Marek
Lange, Reinhard
Halabalová, Věra
Yehya, Alaa
Hrnčiřík, Josef
Chevalier-Lucia, Dominique
Palmade, Laetitia
Blayo, Claire
Konvalinka, Jan
Dumay, Eliane
author_sort Ingr, Marek
collection PubMed
description High-pressure methods have become an interesting tool of investigation of structural stability of proteins. They are used to study protein unfolding, but dissociation of oligomeric proteins can be addressed this way, too. HIV-1 protease, although an interesting object of biophysical experiments, has not been studied at high pressure yet. In this study HIV-1 protease is investigated by high pressure (up to 600 MPa) fluorescence spectroscopy of either the inherent tryptophan residues or external 8-anilino-1-naphtalenesulfonic acid at 25°C. A fast concentration-dependent structural transition is detected that corresponds to the dimer-monomer equilibrium. This transition is followed by a slow concentration independent transition that can be assigned to the monomer unfolding. In the presence of a tight-binding inhibitor none of these transitions are observed, which confirms the stabilizing effect of inhibitor. High-pressure enzyme kinetics (up to 350 MPa) also reveals the stabilizing effect of substrate. Unfolding of the protease can thus proceed only from the monomeric state after dimer dissociation and is unfavourable at atmospheric pressure. Dimer-destabilizing effect of high pressure is caused by negative volume change of dimer dissociation of −32.5 mL/mol. It helps us to determine the atmospheric pressure dimerization constant of 0.92 μM. High-pressure methods thus enable the investigation of structural phenomena that are difficult or impossible to measure at atmospheric pressure.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4362767
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-43627672015-03-23 Inhibitor and Substrate Binding Induced Stability of HIV-1 Protease against Sequential Dissociation and Unfolding Revealed by High Pressure Spectroscopy and Kinetics Ingr, Marek Lange, Reinhard Halabalová, Věra Yehya, Alaa Hrnčiřík, Josef Chevalier-Lucia, Dominique Palmade, Laetitia Blayo, Claire Konvalinka, Jan Dumay, Eliane PLoS One Research Article High-pressure methods have become an interesting tool of investigation of structural stability of proteins. They are used to study protein unfolding, but dissociation of oligomeric proteins can be addressed this way, too. HIV-1 protease, although an interesting object of biophysical experiments, has not been studied at high pressure yet. In this study HIV-1 protease is investigated by high pressure (up to 600 MPa) fluorescence spectroscopy of either the inherent tryptophan residues or external 8-anilino-1-naphtalenesulfonic acid at 25°C. A fast concentration-dependent structural transition is detected that corresponds to the dimer-monomer equilibrium. This transition is followed by a slow concentration independent transition that can be assigned to the monomer unfolding. In the presence of a tight-binding inhibitor none of these transitions are observed, which confirms the stabilizing effect of inhibitor. High-pressure enzyme kinetics (up to 350 MPa) also reveals the stabilizing effect of substrate. Unfolding of the protease can thus proceed only from the monomeric state after dimer dissociation and is unfavourable at atmospheric pressure. Dimer-destabilizing effect of high pressure is caused by negative volume change of dimer dissociation of −32.5 mL/mol. It helps us to determine the atmospheric pressure dimerization constant of 0.92 μM. High-pressure methods thus enable the investigation of structural phenomena that are difficult or impossible to measure at atmospheric pressure. Public Library of Science 2015-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4362767/ /pubmed/25781460 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119099 Text en © 2015 Ingr et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ingr, Marek
Lange, Reinhard
Halabalová, Věra
Yehya, Alaa
Hrnčiřík, Josef
Chevalier-Lucia, Dominique
Palmade, Laetitia
Blayo, Claire
Konvalinka, Jan
Dumay, Eliane
Inhibitor and Substrate Binding Induced Stability of HIV-1 Protease against Sequential Dissociation and Unfolding Revealed by High Pressure Spectroscopy and Kinetics
title Inhibitor and Substrate Binding Induced Stability of HIV-1 Protease against Sequential Dissociation and Unfolding Revealed by High Pressure Spectroscopy and Kinetics
title_full Inhibitor and Substrate Binding Induced Stability of HIV-1 Protease against Sequential Dissociation and Unfolding Revealed by High Pressure Spectroscopy and Kinetics
title_fullStr Inhibitor and Substrate Binding Induced Stability of HIV-1 Protease against Sequential Dissociation and Unfolding Revealed by High Pressure Spectroscopy and Kinetics
title_full_unstemmed Inhibitor and Substrate Binding Induced Stability of HIV-1 Protease against Sequential Dissociation and Unfolding Revealed by High Pressure Spectroscopy and Kinetics
title_short Inhibitor and Substrate Binding Induced Stability of HIV-1 Protease against Sequential Dissociation and Unfolding Revealed by High Pressure Spectroscopy and Kinetics
title_sort inhibitor and substrate binding induced stability of hiv-1 protease against sequential dissociation and unfolding revealed by high pressure spectroscopy and kinetics
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4362767/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25781460
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119099
work_keys_str_mv AT ingrmarek inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics
AT langereinhard inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics
AT halabalovavera inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics
AT yehyaalaa inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics
AT hrncirikjosef inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics
AT chevalierluciadominique inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics
AT palmadelaetitia inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics
AT blayoclaire inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics
AT konvalinkajan inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics
AT dumayeliane inhibitorandsubstratebindinginducedstabilityofhiv1proteaseagainstsequentialdissociationandunfoldingrevealedbyhighpressurespectroscopyandkinetics