EXPRESSION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF THE N-TERMINAL DOMAIN OF AN OLEOSIN PROTEIN FROM SUNFLOWER

被引:0
|
作者
LI, M [1 ]
KEDDIE, JS [1 ]
SMITH, LJ [1 ]
CLARK, DC [1 ]
MURPHY, DJ [1 ]
机构
[1] JOHN INNES CTR PLANT SCI RES,DEPT BRASSICA & OILSEEDS RES,NORWICH NR4 7UH,ENGLAND
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Oil bodies of plant seeds contain a triacylglycerol matrix surrounded by a monolayer of phospholipids embedded with alkaline proteins termed oleosins. Although oleosins are amphipathic proteins, they are unlike bilayer membrane proteins since they are associated with a single lipid:water interface at the oil body surface. Oleosins are unusual proteins because they contain a 70-80-residue uninterrupted nonpolar domain, flanked by relative polar C- and N-terminal domains. In the present study, we report the expression of the N-terminal domain of the 18-kDa oleosin isoform from sunflower as a recombinant fusion protein in Escherichia coli and the determination of its secondary structure using CD and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy either as a purified but partially denatured peptide or reconstituted into liposomes. The structure derived from physical studies was then compared and assigned with those predicted from analysis of the primary sequence of the N-terminal domain. Based on data derived from CD spectroscopy analysis of purified and partially renatured N-terminal polypeptide, it contains about 10% alpha-helical structure, 20-30% beta-strand structure, approximately 8% beta-turn structure, and 60% random coil structure. However, analysis of the polypeptide reconstituted into liposomes showed an increased content of alpha-helical structure to about 20% and an increased beta-strand structure content to about 30-40%. Data derived from Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy studies and compared with the data predicted from the primary sequence showed the peptide is well structured with some antiparallel beta-strand structure from residues 2-9, parallel beta-strand structure from residues 30-37 and/or 42-49, and alpha-helical structure from residues 10-23 and/or 43-49. There is potential amphipathic alpha-helix from residues 10-23. Based on these results, the following model for the secondary structure of the N-terminal domain of sunflower oleosin can be proposed. Residues 2-9 would produce amphipathic antiparallel beta-strand structure. Residues 10-23 would produce an amphipathic alpha-helical structure. Residues 30-37 and/or 42-49 would give parallel beta-strand structure, or residues 42-49 could form a nonpolar alpha-helical structure that would insert into the oil matrix.
引用
收藏
页码:17504 / 17512
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] CHED 840-Expression and purification of myxoma virus leukemia associated protein N-terminal domain
    Asiamah, Rebecca
    Lawrence, Dana C.
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2008, 235
  • [32] Structural and biochemical characterization of Schlafen11 N-terminal domain
    Hou, Pengjiao
    Hao, Wei
    Qin, Bo
    Li, Mengyun
    Zhao, Rong
    Cui, Sheng
    NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2023, 51 (13) : 7053 - 7070
  • [33] Crystallization and preliminary crystallographic characterization of the N-terminal Kunitz domain of boophilin
    Cereija, Tatiana B.
    Figueiredo, Ana C.
    de Sanctis, Daniele
    Tanaka, Aparecida S.
    Barbosa Pereira, Pedro Jose
    ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA SECTION F-STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY COMMUNICATIONS, 2012, 68 : 436 - 439
  • [34] Kinetic characterization of the N-terminal domain of Malonyl-CoA reductase
    Cavuzic, Mirela Tkalcic
    Waldrop, Grover L.
    BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-PROTEINS AND PROTEOMICS, 2024, 1872 (02):
  • [35] Characterization of the Redox Transition of the XRCC1 N-terminal Domain
    Gabel, Scott A.
    Smith, Cassandra E.
    Cuneo, Matthew J.
    Mueller, Geoffrey A.
    Kirby, Thomas W.
    DeRose, Eugene F.
    Krahn, Juno M.
    London, Robert E.
    STRUCTURE, 2014, 22 (12) : 1754 - 1763
  • [36] Stable expression and characterization of N-terminal tagged recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein 15
    Li, Qinglei
    Rajanahally, Saneal
    Edson, Mark A.
    Matzuk, Martin M.
    MOLECULAR HUMAN REPRODUCTION, 2009, 15 (12) : 779 - 788
  • [37] Crystallization of the N-terminal domain of the Escherichia coli regulatory protein TyrR
    MacPherson, KHR
    Carr, PD
    Verger, D
    Kwok, T
    Davidson, BE
    Ollis, DL
    ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA SECTION D-BIOLOGICAL CRYSTALLOGRAPHY, 1999, 55 : 1923 - 1924
  • [38] Heterologous overexpression of the serotonin transport protein and its N-terminal domain
    Titgemeyer, F
    Schloss, P
    HilbererEhret, S
    Boer, AK
    Robillard, GT
    JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 1996, 66 : S42 - S42
  • [39] Solution NMR structure of the N-terminal domain of the human DEK protein
    Devany, Matthew
    Kappes, Ferdinand
    Chen, Kuan-Ming
    Markovitz, David M.
    Matsuo, Hiroshi
    PROTEIN SCIENCE, 2008, 17 (02) : 205 - 215
  • [40] Characterization of TonB interactions with the FepA cork domain and FecA N-terminal signaling domain
    Peacock, R. Sean
    Andrushchenko, Valery V.
    Demcoe, A. Ross
    Gehmlich, Matt
    Lu, Lily Sia
    Garcia Herrero, Alicia
    Vogel, Hans J.
    BIOMETALS, 2006, 19 (02) : 127 - 142