压力诱导折叠中间体,这对蛋白质- dna识别和病毒组装至关重要

Jerson L. Silva , Andréa C. Oliveira , Andre M.O. Gomes , Luís Maurício T.R. Lima , Ronaldo Mohana-Borges , Ana B.F. Pacheco , Débora Foguel
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引用次数: 47

摘要

蛋白质与核酸的相互作用对于复制、转录、酶切、翻译和病毒组装等多种基本生物过程至关重要。蛋白质- dna和蛋白质- rna识别的分子基础与系统的热力学密切相关。我们在这里回顾了蛋白质-核酸相互作用如何以与蛋白质折叠和蛋白质组装中蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用相同的方式接近,使用静水压力作为主要工具,并采用几种光谱技术,特别是荧光,圆二色性和高分辨率核磁共振。高压具有稳定蛋白质部分折叠状态或熔融球状状态的独特特性。在许多蛋白质中,正确折叠和错误折叠之间的竞争导致不溶性聚集体的形成,这是生物技术行业和人类疾病(如淀粉样变性、阿尔茨海默病、朊病毒和肿瘤疾病)中的一个重要问题。压力研究表明,在几种细菌、植物和哺乳动物病毒的未展开结构和完全折叠结构之间存在部分折叠(熔融球状)构象的梯度。使用压力,我们已经检测到核糖核蛋白中间体的存在,其中外壳蛋白部分展开但与RNA结合。这些中间体是抗病毒化合物的潜在靶点。对病毒的压力研究具有直接的生物技术应用。对压力灭活病毒的能力进行了评估,以期在疫苗开发和病毒灭菌方面的应用。最近的研究表明,压力导致病毒灭活,同时保持免疫原性。有大量证据表明,高压循环使病毒处于“融合中间状态”,不具有传染性,但具有高度免疫原性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pressure induces folding intermediates that are crucial for protein–DNA recognition and virus assembly

Protein–nucleic acid interactions are crucial for a variety of fundamental biological processes such as replication, transcription, restriction, translation and virus assembly. The molecular basis of protein–DNA and protein–RNA recognition is deeply related to the thermodynamics of the systems. We review here how protein–nucleic acid interactions can be approached in the same way as protein–protein interactions involved in protein folding and protein assembly, using hydrostatic pressure as the primary tool and employing several spectroscopic techniques, especially fluorescence, circular dichroism and high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance. High pressure has the unique property of stabilizing partially folded states or molten-globule states of a protein. The competition between correct folding and misfolding, which in many proteins leads to formation of insoluble aggregates is an important problem in the biotechnology industry and in human diseases such as amyloidosis, Alzheimer’s, prion and tumor diseases. The pressure studies reveal that a gradient of partially folded (molten globule) conformations is present between the unfolded and fully folded structure of several bacteria, plant and mammalian viruses. Using pressure, we have detected the presence of a ribonucleoprotein intermediate, where the coat protein is partially unfolded but bound to RNA. These intermediates are potential targets for antiviral compounds. Pressure studies on viruses have direct biotechnological applications. The ability of pressure to inactivate viruses has been evaluated with a view toward the applications of vaccine development and virus sterilization. Recent studies demonstrate that pressure causes virus inactivation while preserving the immunogenic properties. There is substantial evidence that a high-pressure cycle traps a virus in the ‘fusion intermediate state’, not infectious but highly immunogenic.

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