Zusammenfassung
Recombinant maltose-binding protein from Thermotoga maritima (TmMBP) was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity, applying heat incubation of the crude extract at 75 degrees C. As taken from the spectral, physicochemical and binding properties, the recombinant protein is indistinguishable from the natural protein isolated from the periplasm of Thermotoga maritima. At neutral pH, ...
Zusammenfassung
Recombinant maltose-binding protein from Thermotoga maritima (TmMBP) was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity, applying heat incubation of the crude extract at 75 degrees C. As taken from the spectral, physicochemical and binding properties, the recombinant protein is indistinguishable from the natural protein isolated from the periplasm of Thermotoga maritima. At neutral pH, TmMBP exhibits extremely high intrinsic stability with a thermal transition >105 degrees C. Guanidinium chloride-induced equilibrium unfolding transitions at varying temperatures result in a stability maximum at approximate to 40 degrees C. At room temperature, the thermodynamic analysis of the highly cooperative unfolding equilibrium transition yields Delta G(N) --> (U) 100(+/-5) kJ mol(-1) for the free energy of stabilization. Compared to mesophilic MBP from E. coli as a reference, this value is increased by about 60 kJ mol(-1). At temperatures around the optimal growth temperature of T. maritima (t(opt) approximate to 80 degrees C), the yield of refolding does not exceed 80%; the residual 20% are misfolded, as indicated by ii decrease in stability as well as loss of the maltose-binding capacity. TmMBP is able to bind maltose, maltotriose and trehalose with dissociation constants in the nanomolar to micromolar range, combining the substrate specificities of the homologs from the mesophilic bacterium E.coli and the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus litoralis. Fluorescence quench experiments allowed the dissociation constants of Ligand binding to be quantified. Binding of maltose was found to be endothermic and entropy-driven, with Delta H-b = + 47 kJ mol(-1) and Delta S-b = + 257 J mol(-1) K-1. Extrapolation of the linear vant 'Hoff plot to t(opt) resulted in K-d approximate to 0.3 mu M. This result is in agreement with data reported for: the MBPs from E, coli and T, litoralis at their respective optimum growth temperatures, corroborating the general observation that proteins under their specific physiological conditions are in corresponding states. (C) 2000 Academic Press.