Effects of an interchain disulfide bond on tropomyosin structure: intrinsic fluorescence and circular dichroism studies.

Abstract An interchain disulfide crosslink was introduced into rabbit skeletal tropomyosin (TM) at Cys190 by two different methods under non-denaturing conditions. The effects of the crosslink on the structure of tropomyosin were investigated by fluorescence and circular dichroism methods as a function of temperature and guanidine · hydrochloride concentration. Four different preparations were studied: Nbs 2 -TM, red-TM crosslinked with Ellman's reagent, 5,5′-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate); O 2 -TM, TM whose SH groups were air-oxidized; red-TM, TM reduced with dithiothreitol; IA-TM, red-TM whose SH groups were blocked with iodoacetamide. Sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis studies indicated that SS crosslinks were quantitatively introduced between the subunits of TM for Nbs 2 -TM and O 2 -TM. In the completely folded state (below 25 °C or in the absence of denaturant) and in the unfolded state (above 65 °C or greater than 4 m -guanidine · hydrochloride) all of the samples had the same Tyr fluorescence quantum yield, accessibility to acrylamide fluorescence quenching, fluorescence polarization and mean residue rotation at 222 nm. Thermal and denaturant-induced unfolding profiles at pH 7.5 were obtained for each sample with measurements of these parameters. The main transition at about 45 °C or 2 m -guanidine · hydrochloride was shifted about +7 deg. C and 0.8 m in guanidine · hydrochloride, respectively, for the crosslinked samples as compared to the uncrosslinked samples. In addition, a destabilizing pretransition was observed in the 30 to 45 °C region or the 0 to 2 m -guanidine · hydrochloride region only for the crosslinked samples when polarization or ellipticity was measured. Studies of the ability of Nbs 2 to crosslink red-TM as a function of guanidine · hydrochloride concentration indicated that the chains separate at Cys190 between 0 and 2 m -guanidine · hydrochloride before they dissociate. Thus, the effect of the SS crosslink at Cys190 on the conformation of TM at physiological temperatures appears to be related to the inherent instability of the molecule in this region of the sequence.

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