• 제목/요약/키워드: Conformational lock

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Conformational Lock and Dissociative Thermal Inactivation of Lentil Seedling Amine Oxidase

  • Moosavi-Nejad, S. Zahra;Moosavi-Movahedi, Ali-Akbar;Rezaei-Tavirani, Mostafa;Floris, Giovanni;Medda, Rosaria
    • BMB Reports
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    • 제36권2호
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    • pp.167-172
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    • 2003
  • The kinetics of thermal inactivation of copper-containing amine oxidase from lentil seedlings were studied in a 100 mM potassium phosphate buffer, pH 7, using putrescine as the substrate. The temperature range was between $47-60^{\circ}C$. The thermal inactivation curves were not linear at 52 and $57^{\circ}C$; three linear phases were shown. The first phase gave some information about the number of dimeric forms of the enzyme that were induced by the higher temperatures using the "conformational lock" pertaining theory to oligomeric enzyme. The "conformational lock" caused two additional dimeric forms of the enzyme when the temperature increased to $57^{\circ}C$. The second and third phases were interpreted according to a dissociative thermal inactivation model. These phases showed that lentil amine oxidase was reversibly-dissociated before the irreversible thermal inactivation. Although lentil amine oxidase is not a thermostable enzyme, its dimeric structure can form "conformational lock," conferring a structural tolerance to the enzyme against heat stress.

Thermal Dissociation and Conformational Lock of Superoxide Dismutase

  • Hong, J.;Moosavi-Movahedi, A.A.;Ghourchian, H.;Amani, M.;Amanlou, M.;Chilaka, F.C.
    • BMB Reports
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    • 제38권5호
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    • pp.533-538
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    • 2005
  • The kinetics of thermal dissociation of superoxide dismutase (SOD) was studied in 0.05 M Tris-HCl buffer at pH 7.4 containing $10^{-4}\;M$ EDTA. The number of conformational locks and contact areas and amino acid residues of dimers of SOD were obtained by kinetic analysis and biochemical calculation. The cleavage bonds between dimers of SOD during thermal dissociation and type of interactions between specific amino acid residues were also simulated. Two identical contact areas between two subunits were identified. Cleavage of these contact areas resulted in dissociation of the subunits, with destruction of the active centers, and thus, lost of activity. It is suggested that the contact areas interact with active centers by conformational changes involving secondary structural elements.

Computational Study on Oligomer Formation of Fibril-forming Peptide of α-Synuclein

  • Park, Seong-Byeong;Yoon, Je-Seong;Jang, Soon-Min;Lee, Kyung-Hee;Shin, Seok-Min
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • 제33권3호
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    • pp.848-854
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    • 2012
  • We have studied the oligomerization of a fibril-forming segment of ${\alpha}$-Synulcein using a replica exchange molecular dynamics (REMD) simulation. The simulation was performed with trimers and tetramers of a 12 amino acid residue stretch (residues 71-82) of ${\alpha}$-Synulcein. From extensive REMD simulations, we observed the spontaneous formation of both trimer and tetramer, demonstrating the self-aggregating and fibril-forming properties of the peptides. Secondary structure profile and clustering analysis illustrated that antiparallel ${\beta}$-sheet structures are major species corresponding to the global free energy minimum. As the size of the oligomer increases from a dimer to a tetramer, conformational stability is increased. We examined the evolution of simple order parameters and their free energy profiles to identify the process of aggregation. It was found that the degree of aggregation increased as time passed. Tetramer formation was slower than trimer formation and a transition in order parameters was observed, indicating the full development of tetramer conformation which is more stable than that of the trimer. The shape of free energy surface and change of order parameter distributions indicate that the oligomer formation follows a dock-and-lock process.