• Title of article

    The Effect of Salts on the Activity and Stability of Escherichia coli and Haloferax volcanii Dihydrofolate Reductases

  • Author/Authors

    Donna J. Wright، نويسنده , , Douglas D Banks، نويسنده , , Jeremy R. Lohman، نويسنده , , Jacqueline L Hilsenbeck، نويسنده , , Lisa M. Gloss، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    327
  • To page
    344
  • Abstract
    The extremely halophilic Archae require near-saturating concentrations of salt in the external environment and in their cytoplasm, potassium being the predominant intracellular cation. The proteins of these organisms have evolved to function in concentrations of salt that inactivate or precipitate homologous proteins from non-halophilic species. It has been proposed that haloadaptation is primarily due to clustering of acidic residues on the surface of the protein, and that these clusters bind networks of hydrated ions. The dihydrofolate reductases from Escherichia coli (ecDHFR) and two DHFR isozymes from Haloferax volcanii (hvDHFR1 and hvDHFR2) have been used as a model system to compare the effect of salts on a mesophilic and halophilic enzyme. The KCl-dependence of the activity and substrate affinity was investigated. ecDHFR is largely inactivated above 1 M KCl, with no major effect on substrate affinity. hvDHFR1 and hvDHFR2 unfold at KCl concentrations below ∼0.5 M. Above ∼1 M, the KCl dependence of the hvDHFR activities can be attributed to the effect of salt on substrate affinity. The abilities of NaCl, KCl, and CsCl to enhance the stability to urea denaturation were determined, and similar efficacies of stabilization were observed for all three DHFR variants. The ΔG°(H2O) values increased linearly with increasing KCl and CsCl concentrations. The increase of ΔG°(H2O) as a function of the smallest cation, NaCl, is slightly curved, suggesting a minor stabilization from cation binding or screening of electrostatic repulsion. At their respective physiological ionic strengths, the DHFR variants exhibit similar stabilities. Salts stabilize ecDHFR and the hvDHFRs by a common mechanism, not a halophile-specific mechanism, such as the binding of hydrated salt networks. The primary mode of salt stabilization of the mesophilic and halophilic DHFRs appears to be through preferential hydration and the Hofmeister effect of salt on the activity and entropy of the aqueous solvent. In support of this conclusion, all three DHFRs are similarly stabilized by the non-ionic cosolute, sucrose.
  • Keywords
    Protein folding , circular dichroism , fluorescence , halophilic enzymes , Enzymology
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2002
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1242098