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JBC, Vol. 251, Issue 9, 2648-2652, May, 1976
H. Shindo and J. S. Cohen
The histidine C-2 proton NMR titration curves of ribonuclease S-peptide
(residues 1 to 20) and S-protein (residues 21 to 124) are reported.
Although S-protein contains 3 histidine residues, four discrete resonances
are observed to titrate. One of these arises from the equivalent histidine
residues of unfolded S-protein. The variation in area of the four
resonances indicate that there is a reversible pH-dependent equilibrium
between the folded and unfolded forms of S-protein, with some unfolded
material being present at most pH values. Two of the resonances of the
folded S-protein can be assigned to 2 of the histidine residues, 48 and
105, from the close similarity of their titration curves to those in
ribonuclease. These similarities indicate a homology of portions of the
folded conformation of S-protein to that of ribonuclease in solution. These
results indicate that the complete amino acid sequence is not required to
produce a folded conformation similar to the native globular protein, and
they appear to eliminate the possibility that proteins fold from their NH2
terminus during protein synthesis. The low pH inflection present in the
titration curve assigned to histidine residue 48 in ribonuclease is absent
from this curve in S-protein. This is consistent with our previous
conclusion that this inflection arises from the interaction of histidine 48
with aspartic acid residue 14, which is also absent in S-protein. The third
titrating resonance of native S-protein is assigned to the remaining
histidine residue at position 119. The properties of this resonance are not
identical with either of the titration curves of the active site histidine
residues 12 and 119 of ribonuclease. The resonance assigned to histidine
119 is the only one significantly affected on the addition of sodium
phosphate to S-protein, indicating that some degree of phosphate binding
occurs. In both the absence and presence of phosphate this curve also lacks
the low pH inflection observed in the histidine 119 NMR titration curve in
ribonuclease. This difference presumably arise from a conformational
between ribonuclease and the folded S-protein involving a carboxyl group.
Nuclear magnetic resonance titration curves of histidine ring protons. Ribonuclease S-peptide and S-proteins
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