SDS-resistant Active and Thermostable Dimers Are Obtained from the Dissociation of Homotetrameric β-Glycosidase from Hyperthermophilic Sulfolobus solfataricus in SDS
STABILIZING ROLE OF THE A-C INTERMONOMERIC INTERFACE*
- Fabrizio Gentile‡,
- Pietro Amodeo§,
- Ferdinando Febbraio¶‖,
- Francesco Picaro‡,
- Andrea Motta§,
- Silvestro Formisano‡ and
- Roberto Nucci¶
- From the ‡Istituto di Endocrinologia e Oncologia Sperimentale del CNR and Dipartimento di Biologia e Patologia Cellulare e Molecolare, Università Federico II, Via Pansini 5, 80131 Napoli, §Istituto di Chimica Biomolecolare del CNR, Via Campi Flegrei 34, 80078 Pozzvoli, Napoli, and ¶Istituto di Biochimica delle Proteine del CNR, Via Marconi 10, 80125 Napoli, Italy
Abstract
β-Glycosidases are fundamental, widely conserved enzymes. Those from hyperthermophiles exhibit unusual stabilities toward various perturbants. Previous work with homotetrameric β-glycosidase from hyperthermophilic Sulfolobus solfataricus (M r 226,760) has shown that addition of 0.05–0.1% SDS was associated with minimal secondary structure perturbations and increased activity. This work addresses the effects of SDS on β-glycosidase quaternary structure. In 0.1–1% SDS, the enzyme was dimeric, as determined by Ferguson analysis of transverse-gradient polyacrylamide gels. The catalytic activity of the β-glycosidase dimer in SDS was determined by in-gel assay. A minor decrease of thermal stability in SDS was observed after exposure to temperatures up to 80 °C for 1 h. An analysis of β-glycosidase crystal structure showed different changes in solvent-accessible surface area on going from the tetramer to the two possible dimers (A-C and A-D). Energy minimization and molecular dynamics calculations showed that the A-C dimer, exhibiting the lowest exposed surface area, was more stabilized by a network of polar interactions. The charge distribution around the A-C interface was characterized by a local short range anisotropy, resulting in an unfavorable interaction with SDS. This paper provides a detailed description of an SDS-resistant inter-monomeric interface, which may help understand similar interfaces involved in important biological processes.
- IDDM
- insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
- Aβ
- amyloid-β
- AD
- Alzheimer's disease
- apoE
- apolipoprotein E
- EM
- energy minimization
- MD
- molecular dynamics
- PDB
- Protein Data Bank
- PNPG
- p-nitrophenyl-β-d-glucopyranoside
- SAS
- solvent-accessible surface
- Sβgly
- S. solfataricusβ-glycosidase
- T
- total acrylamide
- C
- N,N′-methylene-bis-acrylamide, as percent of total acrylamide
- X-gal
- 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-d-galactopyranoside
- Received July 8, 2002.
- Revision received September 3, 2002.
- The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











